4.6 Article

They Wanted to Talk to a 'Real Doctor': Predictors, Perpetrators, and Experiences of Racial and Ethnic Discrimination Among Healthcare Workers

期刊

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
卷 37, 期 6, 页码 1475-1483

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-021-07143-3

关键词

discrimination; race and ethnicity; bias; healthcare workers

资金

  1. Yale University's COVID-19 Response Coordination Team
  2. Gulf Research Program of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine

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The study focused on assessing the prevalence, perpetrators, and narratives of racial discrimination among healthcare workers in academic hospitals. Findings showed that a significant percentage of healthcare workers of color, especially females from underrepresented backgrounds and Asian males, reported experiencing discrimination. Discrimination was reported from various sources including patients, teachers, supervisors, co-workers, and institutions. The study also highlighted that the murder of George Floyd intensified URM healthcare workers' experiences of discrimination and that Asian healthcare workers faced discrimination related to pandemic-related anti-Asian violence. The study concluded with recommendations for hospitals to create programs that improve inclusivity and support for healthcare workers.
Background Racial and ethnic diversity of healthcare workers have benefits on team functioning and patient care. However, a significant barrier to retaining diverse providers is discrimination. Objective To assess the predictors, perpetrators, and narratives of racial discrimination among healthcare workers. Design Survey study. Participants Healthcare workers employed at academic hospitals. Main Measures We assessed prevalence and perpetrators of racial and ethnic discrimination using the General Ethnic Discrimination Scale. We included an open-ended question asking respondents to recount experiences of discrimination and analyzed responses using grounded theory. Key Results Of the 997 participants, 12.2% were females from backgrounds underrepresented in medicine (URM), 4.0% URM males, 10.1% Asian females, 4.7% Asian males, 49.1% non-Hispanic White females, and 19.8% non-Hispanic White males. Among healthcare workers of color, 85.2% reported discrimination. Over half of URM females (51.4%), URM males (52.6%), and Asian females (62.5%) reported discrimination by patients. About 20-25% of URM females, URM males, and Asian females reported discrimination by teachers, supervisors, co-workers, and institutions. In adjusted binary logistic models, URM females had 10.14 odds (95% confidence interval [95%CI]: 5.13, 20.02, p<.001), URM males 6.23 odds (95%CI: 2.59, 14.98, p<.001), Asian females 7.90 odds (95%CI: 4.07, 15.33, p<.001), and Asian males 2.96 odds (95% CI: 1.47, 5.97, p=.002) of reporting discrimination compared with non-Hispanic White males. Needing more support was associated with 2.51 odds (95%CI: 1.54, 4.08, p<.001) of reporting discrimination. Our qualitative findings identified that the murder of George Floyd intensified URM healthcare workers' experiences of discrimination through increased fear of violence and requests for unpaid diversity work. Asian healthcare workers reported that pandemic-related anti-Asian violence shaped their experiences of discrimination through increased fear of violence and care refusal from patients. Conclusions Our findings provide insights into experienced discrimination among healthcare workers and opportunities for hospitals to create programs that improve inclusivity.

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