4.8 Article

Patient activation reduces effects of implicit bias on doctor-patient interactions

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2203915119

关键词

intervention; implicit bias; health disparities; cancer

资金

  1. National Cancer Institute of the NIH

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Disparities in medical treatment and health outcomes between Black and White Americans still exist. One reason is that physicians sometimes have implicit racial biases that favor White patients over Black patients. Therefore, patient activation can disrupt the effects of physicians' implicit bias and promote equitable health outcomes.
Disparities between Black and White Americans persist in medical treatment and health outcomes. One reason is that physicians sometimes hold implicit racial biases that favor White (over Black) patients. Thus, disrupting the effects of physicians' implicit bias is one route to promoting equitable health outcomes. In the present research, we tested a potential mechanism to short-circuit the effects of doctors' implicit bias: patient activation, i.e., having patients ask questions and advocate for themselves. Specifically, we trained Black and White standardized patients (SPs) to be activated or typical during appointments with unsuspecting oncologists and primary care physicians in which SPs claimed to have stage IV lung cancer. Supporting the idea that patient activation can promote equitable doctor-patient interactions, results showed that physicians' implicit racial bias (as measured by an implicit association test) predicted racially biased interpersonal treatment among typical SPs (but not among activated SPs) across SP ratings of interaction quality and ratings from independent coders who read the interaction transcripts. This research supports prior work showing that implicit attitudes can undermine interpersonal treatment in medical settings and provides a strategy for ensuring equitable doctor-patient interactions.

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