4.4 Article

Physicians' Anxiety Due to Uncertainty and Use of Race in Medical Decision Making

Journal

MEDICAL CARE
Volume 52, Issue 8, Pages 728-733

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000000157

Keywords

medical decision making; race and ethnicity; uncertainty

Funding

  1. National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health [ZIA HG200324-08]
  2. Greenwall Fellowship Program in Bioethics and Health Policy
  3. Health Resources and Services Administration [T32HP10025]
  4. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [K24 HL083113]

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Background: The explicit use of race in medical decision making is contested. Researchers have hypothesized that physicians use race in care when they are uncertain. Objectives: The aim of this study was to investigate whether physician anxiety due to uncertainty (ADU) is associated with a higher propensity to use race in medical decision making. Research Design: This study included a national cross-sectional survey of general internists. Subjects: A national sample of 1738 clinically active general internists drawn from the SK&A physician database were included in the study. Measures: ADU is a 5-item measure of emotional reactions to clinical uncertainty. Bonham and Sellers Racial Attributes in Clinical Evaluation (RACE) scale includes 7 items that measure self-reported use of race in medical decision making. We used bi-variate regression to test for associations between physician characteristics, ADU, and RACE. Multivariate linear regression was performed to test for associations between ADU and RACE while adjusting for potential confounders. Results: The mean score on ADU was 19.9 (SD = 5.6). Mean score on RACE was 13.5 (SD = 5.6). After adjusting for physician demographics, physicians with higher levels of ADU scored higher on RACE (+beta = 0.08 in RACE, P = 0.04, for each 1-point increase in ADU), as did physicians who understood race to mean biological or genetic ancestral, rather than sociocultural, group. Physicians who graduated from a US medical school, completed fellowship, and had more white patients scored lower on RACE. Conclusions: This study demonstrates positive associations between physicians' ADU, meanings attributed to race, and self-reported use of race in medical decision making. Future research should examine the potential impact of these associations on patient outcomes and health care disparities.

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