| Literature DB >> 17594129 |
Alexander R Green1, Dana R Carney, Daniel J Pallin, Long H Ngo, Kristal L Raymond, Lisa I Iezzoni, Mahzarin R Banaji.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Studies documenting racial/ethnic disparities in health care frequently implicate physicians' unconscious biases. No study to date has measured physicians' unconscious racial bias to test whether this predicts physicians' clinical decisions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17594129 PMCID: PMC2219763 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-007-0258-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Figure 1Implicit Association Test (IAT) sample screens and stimuli. This figure displays sample screens and stimuli from the race preference (black-white/good-bad) IAT. Sample screens a, b, c, and d represent examples of pairing tasks that participants rapidly complete. Pictures of black or white individuals and words representing good or bad evaluative attributes are flashed in the center of the screen, and subjects quickly classify these as to whether they belong with category pairs shown in the upper left or the upper right of their screens using the e or i key on their computer keyboard. Numerous pictures and words are flashed onscreen for each of the two possible pairings, with responses usually taking less than a second and the order counterbalanced across participants. The speed to associate black+bad and white+good (screens a and b) relative to the opposite pairing of black+good and white+bad (screens c and d) constitutes the IAT score, interpreted to be a measure of implicit race preference
Baseline Characteristics and IAT Scores of Physician Participants
| Assigned vignette picture | Mean IAT score* | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristics | Black | White | Attitude (good/bad) | General cooperativeness | Cooperativeness with procedures |
| Overall | |||||
| For demographics ( | 0.36† (SD = 0.40) | 0.30† (SD = 0.39) | 0.22† (SD = 0.40) | ||
| Age, mean (SD), years ( | 29.2 (2.4) | 28.9 (3.2) | NS | NS | NS |
| Sex ( | |||||
| % Female ( | 41.9 | 38.2 | 0.32† | 0.25† | 0.18† |
| % Male ( | 58.1 | 61.8 | 0.39† | 0.34† | 0.25† |
| Race/ethnicity ( | |||||
| % European-American/White ( | 67.9 | 60.4 | 0.40† | 0.31† | 0.22† |
| % African-American/Black ( | 2.8 | 6.3 | −0.04‡ | −0.02‡ | −0.07‡ |
| % Hispanic/Latino ( | 0.9 | 3.6 | 0.36§ | 0.13§ | 0.27§ |
| % Asian/Pacific Islander ( | 22.6 | 24.3 | 0.38† | 0.40† | 0.27† |
| % Other ( | 5.7 | 5.4 | 0.22 | 0.23 | 0.09 |
| Socioeconomic background ( | |||||
| % Lower/lower middle ( | 11.3 | 9.8 | 0.16 | 0.22† | 0.06 |
| % Middle ( | 28.3 | 30.4 | 0.38† | 0.30† | 0.23† |
| % Upper middle ( | 50.0 | 53.6 | 0.39† | 0.31† | 0.26† |
| % Upper ( | 10.4 | 6.3 | 0.30† | 0.36† | 0.15 |
| Specialty ( | |||||
| % Internal Medicine ( | 80.2 | 83.0 | 0.36† | 0.33† | 0.24† |
| % Emergency Medicine ( | 19.8 | 17.0 | 0.32† | 0.17† | 0.12 |
| City ( | |||||
| % Boston, MA ( | 81.1 | 78.6 | 0.35† | 0.31† | 0.23† |
| % Atlanta, Ga ( | 18.9 | 21.4 | 0.37† | 0.29† | 0.19† |
| Year of training ( | |||||
| % First ( | 34.3 | 45.5 | 0.38† | 0.32† | 0.23† |
| % Second ( | 23.8 | 30.4 | 0.37† | 0.28† | 0.21† |
| % Third and higher ( | 41.9 | 24.1 | 0.33† | 0.30† | 0.20† |
| % Black patients seen ( | |||||
| <=20% ( | 34.0 | 32.2 | 0.37† | 0.37† | 0.26† |
| >20% ( | 66.0 | 67.8 | 0.35† | 0.27† | 0.20† |
| Mean IAT score | – | – | – | ||
| Attitude (good/bad) ( | 0.35† | 0.36† | |||
| General cooperativeness ( | 0.32† | 0.28† | |||
| Medical cooperativeness ( | 0.19† | 0.25† | |||
No statistically significant differences by assigned vignette picture using chi-squared (categorical variables) or Student’s t test (continuous variables). In the sample there were 10 black physicians. Exclusion of their data did not notably or significantly change any of the data reported here, therefore, all physicians’ data (regardless of race) are displayed.
No significant (NS) difference in mean IAT score for participants above versus below mean age
*Implicit Association Test (IAT) scores: positive value represents prowhite bias, negative value represents problack bias
†Values are statistically significantly different from zero at P < .05
‡Statistically significant difference from the other groups combined, by Student’s t test
§Significance tests conducted on subsamples smaller than n = 10 are not stable parameter estimates and are, therefore, not reported. IAT effects based on these small sample sizes should be interpreted with caution.
Figure 2Magnitude of physicians’ explicit (self-reported) and implicit (Implicit Association Test) race bias on a standardized scale—Cohen’s effect size d
Figure 3Relationship between physician race preference Implicit Association Test (IAT) score and thrombolysis decisions by patient race. *P < .05, **P = .05–0.11, B values are standardized regression coefficients that describe the magnitude of each relationship that the regression lines represent. IAT bias is a continuous variable represented on the polar ends of the x-axis as low antiblack IAT and high antiblack IAT. Treatment recommendation of thrombolysis is represented on the y-axis and is a dichotomous variable for which 0 means “would not give thrombolysis” and 1 means “would give thrombolysis.” Subpanels A–D represent race preference, general cooperativeness, medical cooperativeness, and the composite IAT measures, respectively
Figure 4Relation between physicians’ awareness of the study’s purpose and Implicit Association Test (IAT) bias on recommendation for thrombolysis (black patients only). B values are standardized regression coefficients that describe the magnitude of each relationship that the regression lines represent (P = .001). IAT bias is a continuous variable represented on the polar ends of the x-axis as low antiblack IAT and high antiblack IAT. Treatment recommendation of thrombolysis is represented on the y-axis and is a dichotomous variable for which 1 means “no recommendation” was given and 2 means a “recommendation” was given