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Orientador(es)
Resumo(s)
Racial disparities in clinical recommendations can result in racial disparities in health. While healthcare providers’ implicit racial attitudes (affective component of bias) are theorized to be one major factor contributing to racial disparities in clinical recommendations, empirical evidence to support the link is lacking. This study aimed to bridge this gap by moving beyond the standard approach of operationalizing the quality of clinical recommendations as a guideline-consistent vs. -inconsistent dichotomy. The present secondary study examined the role of provider implicit racial attitudes in the quality of clinical recommendations, operationalized as behaviors reflecting providers’ psychological investment in patient care (i.e., number of words used to describe clinical
recommendations, and number of treatment options recommended). Two-hundred-and-ten White medical trainees reviewed a clinical vignette of either a White or Black male patient and provided clinical recommendations. Their implicit racial attitudes were evaluated using the Implicit Association Test. Participants with more biased implicit racial attitudes (i.e., stronger implicit preference for White vs. Black individuals) used fewer words to describe their clinical recommendations and provided fewer clinical recommendations for the Black (vs. White) patient, while there were no significant differences between Black and White patients among participants with less biased implicit racial attitudes. These results illustrate the insidious impact of implicit racial attitudes in healthcare provision and underscore the need for researchers to consider the complex, nuanced ways in which provider implicit racial attitudes might manifest in clinical decision-making.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
implicit racial attitudes clinical recommendations medical training
Contexto Educativo
Citação
Duffy, C. M. C., Bú, E. do, Pereira, C. R., Madeira, F. & Hagiwara, N. (2024). Healthcare providers’ psychological investment in clinical recommendations: investigating the role of implicit racial attitudes. Social Science & Medicine, Vol. 362, pp. 1-10. DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117435
Editora
Elsevier
