Literature DB >> 19286294

Harms and benefits: collecting ethnicity data in a clinical context.

Colleen Varcoe1, Annette J Browne, Sabrina Wong, Victoria L Smye.   

Abstract

Although ethnicity data are collected in most countries at the population level, it has become more common to collect such data in healthcare settings, partially in response to growing health and social inequities worldwide. However, the implications of doing so have not been studied. This two-year study was designed to critically examine the implications of collecting ethnicity data in healthcare settings. Using a critical ethnographic approach, we interviewed 104 patients, community and healthcare leaders, and healthcare workers within diverse clinical contexts in a large city in Western Canada in 2006-2007. This paper presents an interpretive thematic analysis, using an ethical lens, of the harms and benefits associated with the process of data collection in a clinical context. While most leaders and healthcare workers and some patients envisioned potential benefits associated with having ethnicity data, these benefits were seen as largely contingent upon action being taken to ameliorate inequities. Overwhelmingly, however, leaders from ethno-cultural communities and patients of diverse identities anticipated potential harm arising both from having ethnicity data and the process of collection. The analysis illustrates that in today's sociopolitical context, collecting ethnicity data in clinical contexts may engender considerable harm, particularly for racialized, vulnerable patients. If ethnicity data are currently collected at the population level, evidence of benefit is required before proceeding to collect these data at the point of care.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19286294     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.02.034

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  16 in total

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2.  Patient perspectives on routinely being asked about their race and ethnicity: Qualitative study in primary care.

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5.  Sociodemographic data collection for health equity measurement: a mixed methods study examining public opinions.

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6.  Development of health equity indicators in primary health care organizations using a modified Delphi.

Authors:  Sabrina T Wong; Annette J Browne; Colleen Varcoe; Josée Lavoie; Alycia Fridkin; Victoria Smye; Olive Godwin; David Tu
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7.  Closing the health equity gap: evidence-based strategies for primary health care organizations.

Authors:  Annette J Browne; Colleen M Varcoe; Sabrina T Wong; Victoria L Smye; Josée Lavoie; Doreen Littlejohn; David Tu; Olive Godwin; Murry Krause; Koushambhi B Khan; Alycia Fridkin; Patricia Rodney; John O'Neil; Scott Lennox
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8.  Which Sámi? Sámi inclusion criteria in population-based studies of Sámi health and living conditions in Norway - an exploratory study exemplified with data from the SAMINOR study.

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9.  "Unwell while Aboriginal": iatrogenesis in Australian medical education and clinical case management.

Authors:  Shaun C Ewen; David Hollinsworth
Journal:  Adv Med Educ Pract       Date:  2016-05-27

10.  Enhancing health care equity with Indigenous populations: evidence-based strategies from an ethnographic study.

Authors:  Annette J Browne; Colleen Varcoe; Josée Lavoie; Victoria Smye; Sabrina T Wong; Murry Krause; David Tu; Olive Godwin; Koushambhi Khan; Alycia Fridkin
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2016-10-04       Impact factor: 2.655

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