Social and Behavioral Research Branch, National Human Genome Research Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Cyberpsychol Behav Soc Netw. 2024 Nov;27(11):815-823. doi: 10.1089/cyber.2024.0066. Epub 2024 Sep 24.
Interpersonal bias based on weight and race is widespread in the clinical setting; it is crucial to investigate how emerging genomics technologies will interact with and influence such biases in the future. The current study uses a virtual reality (VR) simulation to investigate the influence of apparent patient race and provision of genomic information on medical students' implicit and explicit bias toward a virtual patient with obesity. Eighty-four third- and fourth-year medical students (64% female, 42% White) were randomized to interact with a simulated virtual patient who appeared as Black versus White, and to receive genomic risk information for the patient versus a control report. We assessed biased behavior during the simulated encounter and self-reported attitudes toward the virtual patient. Medical student participants tended to express more negative attitudes toward the White virtual patient than the Black virtual patient (both of whom had obesity) when genomic information was absent from the encounter. When genomic risk information was provided, this more often mitigated bias for the White virtual patient, whereas negative attitudes and bias against the Black virtual patient either remained consistent or increased. These patterns underscore the complexity of intersectional identities in clinical settings. Provision of genomic risk information was enough of a contextual shift to alter attitudes and behavior. This research leverages VR simulation to provide an early look at how emerging genomic technologies may differentially influence bias and stereotyping in clinical encounters.
人际偏见基于体重和种族在临床环境中普遍存在;研究新兴基因组学技术未来将如何与这些偏见相互作用和影响至关重要。本研究使用虚拟现实 (VR) 模拟来调查明显的患者种族和提供基因组信息对医学生对肥胖虚拟患者的内隐和外显偏见的影响。84 名三四年级医学生(64%为女性,42%为白人)被随机分配与一个看起来是黑人或白人的模拟虚拟患者进行互动,并为患者提供基因组风险信息,而不是对照组报告。我们评估了模拟互动过程中的偏见行为和对虚拟患者的自我报告态度。当互动中没有基因组信息时,医学生参与者往往对白人虚拟患者表现出比黑人虚拟患者更负面的态度(他们都患有肥胖症)。当提供基因组风险信息时,这种情况往往会减轻对白人虚拟患者的偏见,而对黑人虚拟患者的负面态度和偏见则保持不变或增加。这些模式突显了临床环境中交叉身份的复杂性。提供基因组风险信息足以改变态度和行为。本研究利用虚拟现实模拟,早期研究了新兴基因组技术在临床接触中可能如何对偏见和刻板印象产生不同的影响。