| Literature DB >> 30646179 |
Aba Osseo-Asare1, Lilanthi Balasuriya2, Stephen J Huot1, Danya Keene3, David Berg2, Marcella Nunez-Smith1, Inginia Genao1, Darin Latimore1, Dowin Boatright4.
Abstract
Importance: Black, Hispanic, and Native American physicians remain underrepresented in medicine despite national efforts to increase diversity in the health care workforce. Understanding the unique workplace experiences of minority physicians is essential to inform strategies to create a diverse and inclusive workforce. While prior research has explored the influence of race/ethnicity on the experiences of minority faculty and medical students, there is a paucity of literature investigating how race/ethnicity affects the training experiences of resident physicians in graduate medical education. Objective: To characterize how black, Hispanic, and Native American resident physicians experience race/ethnicity in the workplace. Design, Setting, and Participants: Semistructured, in-depth qualitative interviews of black, Hispanic, and Native American residents were performed in this qualitative study. Interviews took place at the 2017 Annual Medical Education Conference (April 12-17, 2017, in Atlanta, Georgia), sponsored by the Student National Medical Association. Interviews were conducted with 27 residents from 21 residency programs representing a diverse range of medical specialties and geographic locations. Main Outcomes and Measures: The workplace experiences of black, Hispanic, and Native American resident physicians in graduate medical education.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30646179 PMCID: PMC6324489 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2018.2723
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Demographics of 27 Participating Minority Resident Physicians
| Demographic | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Female | 15 (56) |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| Black | 19 (70) |
| Hispanic | 3 (11) |
| Native American | 1 (4) |
| Mixed | 4 (15) |
| Program type | |
| Academic | 21 (78) |
| Community | 4 (15) |
| Combined | 1 (4) |
| Did not state | 1 (4) |
| Geographic location | |
| Midwest | 8 (30) |
| Northeast | 8 (30) |
| West | 7 (26) |
| South | 3 (11) |
| Did not state | 1 (4) |
| Year in residency training | |
| PGY1 | 5 (19) |
| PGY2 | 7 (26) |
| PGY3 | 13 (48) |
| PGY4 | 2 (7) |
| Specialty | |
| Anesthesiology | 1 (4) |
| Emergency medicine | 5 (19) |
| Family medicine | 5 (19) |
| Internal medicine | 1 (4) |
| Neurology | 1 (4) |
| Obstetrics and gynecology | 1 (4) |
| Pediatrics | 3 (11) |
| Psychiatry | 3 (11) |
| Radiology | 4 (15) |
| Surgery | 2 (7) |
| Urology | 1 (4) |
Abbreviation: PGY, postgraduate year.
Themes and Subthemes, With Illustrative Quotations
| Theme or Subtheme | Illustrative Quotation |
|---|---|
| Alien in one’s own land | “Wow, you’ve really come a long way. You know, like, you know, being like a Mexican, that’s just…I didn’t expect somebody to be that well educated. And I said, Oh wow. Well, I did go to school, and I’ve been here for a while. And I’m actually not from Mexico, but I’m proud of my heritage. Actually, I’m fourth generation.” |
| Assumption of lower status | “There were instances where they would just call me ‘Nurse’ or would think that I’m everything except for a doctor.” |
| “Oh yeah, I mean the one that happens the most frequently is patients thinking that I’m like transport. Not recognizing that I am their physician surgeon that’s going to be operating on them and just seeing that thought process go through their head. Or having patients that are like, ‘Oh you don’t really look like a doctor.’” | |
| “When you walk in and somebody’s like, ‘Hey, can you go fill my coffee?’” | |
| Exoticization and assumptions of similarity | “There was an African American resident a year before me. We would constantly get confused. Even now…. We don’t look anything alike.” |
| “There is one other black guy in the program, a guy from Cameroon. And we look nothing alike. But we have been called each other or I know for sure that I’ve been called his name before.” | |
| Explicit bias | “There was a situation most recently where I was with one of my program directors and we went in a room to see a patient, and the father was irate, and then he went out to the hallway and one of the things he said to the nurses was that they sent the big black guy in the room to intimidate me.” |
| Barriers to reporting discrimination | “It wasn’t really dealt with, because we had this really long process of…you have to submit the issue to Ombuds and all this other stuff in terms of dealing with stuff like that.” |
| “And that time from 6:00 | |
| “Oh, I’ve brought it up in the past, and it was just kind of pushed aside.” | |
| Fear of repercussions | “They didn’t [report it] because it was actually their director who made the comment and then that director is a part of this committee. So, they didn’t make…and I don’t know that they even brought it up to the person when they made the comment…you’re trying to balance not upsetting someone too much where they feel like there’s going to be repercussions.” |
| Race/ethnicity ambassador | “…you get tapped to do various things, and some of it is stuff that you’re interested in and some of it is because they need, not necessarily a token individual, but somebody to be representative of all of the ideas of minorities because you have that insight.” |
| Pressure to assimilate | “Yeah, you just told someone who’s had an Afro for the last 2 years who finally got their hair flatironed once, and you’re like ‘Oh, your hair looks so professional!’” |
| Coping mechanisms | “I laughed it off.” |
| “With a smile. I took it.” | |
| “You just kind of share stories and just kind of cope through things about maybe a patient who is insensitive about an individual wearing a garment, or an elderly man at the VA who had a physician of Asian descent, who he might have made a racial remark too.” | |
| “…you want to make sure that you’re good, and you want to make sure that you’re smart, and that you’re brilliant, and that they don’t have anything to say about you.” | |
| Social isolation and scarce professional mentorship | “There aren’t a ton of people of color in positions of leadership or as attendings.” |
| “The fact that there aren’t many of us in the program. For example, in my program, they have over 100-something residents and not even 10 are minorities.” | |