Garrett Sarah B, Jones Linda, Montague Alexandra, Fa-Yusuf Haleemat, Harris-Taylor Julie, Powell Breezy, Chan Erica, Zamarripa Stephen, Hooper Sarah, Chambers Butcher Brittany D
Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
California Preterm Birth Initiative, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
Health Equity. 2023 Sep 13;7(1):506-519. doi: 10.1089/heq.2023.0126. eCollection 2023.
In an attempt to address health inequities, many U.S. states have considered or enacted legislation requiring antibias or implicit bias training (IBT) for health care providers. California's "Dignity in Pregnancy and Childbirth Act" requires that hospitals and alternative birthing centers provide IBT to perinatal clinicians with the goal of improving clinical outcomes for Black women and birthing people. However, there is as yet insufficient evidence to identify what IBT approaches, if any, achieve this goal. Engaging the experiences and insights of IBT stakeholders is a foundational step in informing nascent IBT policy, curricula, and implementation.
We conducted a multimethod community-based participatory research study with key stakeholders of California's IBT policy to identify key challenges and recommendations for effective clinician IBT. We used focus groups, in-depth interviews, combined inductive/deductive thematic analysis, and multiple techniques to promote rigor and validity. Participants were San Francisco Bay Area-based individuals who identified as Black or African American women with a recent hospital birth (=20), and hospital-based perinatal clinicians (=20).
We identified numerous actionable challenges and recommendations regarding aspects of (1) state law; (2) IBT content and format; (3) health care facility IBT implementation; (4) health care facility environment; and (5) provider commitment and behaviors. Patient and clinician insights overlapped substantially. Many respondents felt IBT would improve outcomes only in combination with other antiracism interventions.
These stakeholder insights offer policy-makers, health system leaders, and curriculum developers crucial guidance for the future development and implementation of clinician antibias interventions.
为了解决健康不平等问题,许多美国州已考虑或颁布立法,要求对医疗保健提供者进行反偏见或隐性偏见培训(IBT)。加利福尼亚州的《妊娠和分娩尊严法案》要求医院和替代分娩中心为围产期临床医生提供IBT,目标是改善黑人女性和分娩者的临床结局。然而,目前尚无足够证据确定哪种IBT方法(如果有的话)能实现这一目标。听取IBT利益相关者的经验和见解是为新兴的IBT政策、课程和实施提供信息的基础步骤。
我们与加利福尼亚州IBT政策的关键利益相关者进行了一项基于社区的多方法参与性研究,以确定有效的临床医生IBT的关键挑战和建议。我们使用了焦点小组、深入访谈、归纳/演绎相结合的主题分析以及多种技术来提高严谨性和有效性。参与者是旧金山湾区的个人,他们被认定为近期在医院分娩的黑人或非裔美国女性(=20),以及医院围产期临床医生(=20)。
我们确定了关于以下方面的众多可采取行动的挑战和建议:(1)州法律;(2)IBT内容和形式;(3)医疗机构IBT的实施;(4)医疗机构环境;以及(5)提供者的承诺和行为。患者和临床医生的见解有很大重叠。许多受访者认为,只有与其他反种族主义干预措施相结合,IBT才能改善结局。
这些利益相关者的见解为政策制定者、卫生系统领导者和课程开发者在临床医生反偏见干预措施的未来发展和实施方面提供了关键指导。