| Literature DB >> 32166114 |
Joanna Perdomo1, Destiny Tolliver2,3, Heather Hsu4,5, Yuan He2,3, Katherine A Nash6,7, Stephanie Donatelli8, Camila Mateo9, Cynthia Akagbosu2,3, Faraz Alizadeh2,3, Alexandra Power-Hays2,3, Tyler Rainer2,3, Daniel J Zheng2,3, Caroline J Kistin4,5, Robert J Vinci10,11, Catherine D Michelson4,5.
Abstract
Introduction: The medical community recognizes the importance of confronting structural racism and implicit bias to address health inequities. Several curricula aimed at teaching trainees about these issues are described in the literature. However, few curricula exist that engage faculty members as learners rather than teachers of these topics or target interdisciplinary audiences.Entities:
Keywords: Case-Based Learning; Diversity, Inclusion, Health Equity; Editor's Choice; Faculty Development; Implicit Bias; Interdisciplinary; Interprofessional Education; Structural Racism
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 32166114 PMCID: PMC7050660 DOI: 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MedEdPORTAL ISSN: 2374-8265
Summary of Cases
| Case | Case Topic | Specific Biases Discussed | Historical/Present-Day Contexts Reviewed | Reflection Exercises | Resources Provided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Abdominal pain | Introduction to implicit bias | Heuristics, system 1 and system 2 thinking, the Implicit Association Test | Guided imagery, generating shared conference values using Poll Everywhere, perspective taking | Worksheet for reflection exercises |
| 2 | Sickle cell disease and fever | Stigma and bias associated with sickle cell disease | History of the false construction of race as a biological entity, the role of mistrust in sickle cell disease | Guided imagery, generating shared conference values using Poll Everywhere, reflection writing, perspective taking | Worksheet for reflection exercises |
| 3 | Discipline | Bias in approach to family discipline practices | AAP guidelines on discipline, disparities in school discipline practices, outcomes associated with physical discipline, media portrayals of discipline practices | Guided imagery, perspective taking, individual reflection | Community resources for parenting and discipline support |
| 4 | Contraceptive counseling | Bias in contraceptive counseling | AAP and SAHM guidelines on contraceptive counseling, history of forced sterilization and coercion in reproductive health counseling | Guided imagery, perspective taking, individual reflection | Contraceptive counseling algorithm, worksheet for reflection exercises |
| 5 | Williams syndrome | Bias in medical textbooks and training | Disparities in physical diagnosis education, disparities in genetics databases, medical education's role in falsely teaching race as a biological construct | Storytelling, perspective taking | Handout with action items for addressing bias in medical education |
| 6 | Trauma exposure | Colorism | Historical trauma faced by indigenous populations in El Salvador | Guided imagery, perspective taking | Handout on Diversity-Informed Mental Health Tenets |
| 7 | Behavioral counseling | Bias related to Department of Children and Families involvement | History of child protection, concept of the New Jane Crow | Guided imagery, perspective taking, incorporation of quality improvement tools including creation of a fishbone diagram | Handout on Talking Race Toolkit, fishbone diagram for quality improvement exercise |
Abbreviations: AAP, American Academy of Pediatrics; SAHM, Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine.
Attendance Estimates and Postconference Survey Responses
| Conference | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Survey Measure | 1: No. (%) | 2: No. (%) | 3: No. (%) | 4: No. (%) | 5: No. (%) | 6: No. (%) | 7: No. (%) |
| Estimated attendance[ | 77 (100) | 71 (100) | 51 (100) | 51 (100) | 73 (100) | 66 (100) | 74 (100) |
| Survey response | 48 (62) | 25 (35) | 28 (55) | 35 (69) | 48 (66) | 49 (74) | 53 (72) |
| Attendees: | |||||||
| Attending physician | 15/47 (32) | 4/25 (16) | 15/28 (54) | 18/32 (56) | 14/48 (29) | 20/46 (43) | 10/53 (19) |
| Fellow | 3/47 (6) | 1/25 (4) | 0/28 (0) | 1/32 (3) | 4/48 (8) | 1/46 (2) | 1/53 (2) |
| Resident | 18/47 (38) | 6/25 (24) | 9/28 (32) | 8/32 (25) | 10/48 (21) | 17/46 (37) | 21/53 (40) |
| Medical student[ | 10/47 (21) | 13/25 (52) | 3/28 (11) | 1/32 (3) | 8/48 (17) | 4/46 (9) | 12/53 (23) |
| Other | 1/47 (2) | 1/25 (4) | 1/28 (4) | 4/32 (13) | 12/48 (25) | 4/46 (9) | 9/53 (17) |
| Attendee department: | |||||||
| Pediatrics | 31/47 (66) | 12/25 (48) | 22/27 (81) | 28/31 (90) | 38/48 (79) | 36/45 (80) | 43/51 (84) |
| Family medicine | 6/47 (13) | 0/25 (0) | 2/27 (7) | 0/31 (0) | 2/48 (4) | 5/45 (11) | 2/51 (4) |
| Other | 10/47 (21) | 13/25 (52) | 3/27 (11) | 3/31 (10) | 8/48 (17) | 4/45 (9) | 8/51 (16) |
| Respondents answering “yes” to whether the conference met stated objectives: | |||||||
| Introduce HER | 46/47 (98) | 24/25 (96) | 26/27 (96) | 29/31 (94) | NA | NA | NA |
| Introduce implicit bias and its application to medicine | 46/47 (98) | 24/25 (96) | 26/27 (96) | 27/31 (87) | NA | NA | NA |
| Promote reflection on personal implicit bias[ | 43/47 (91) | 21/24 (88) | 25/26 (96) | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Identify resources, opportunities, or tools to address implicit bias[ | 30/46 (65) | 17/25 (68) | 27/27 (100) | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Respondents rating conference educational value as “good” or “excellent” | 47/47 (100) | 24/25 (96) | 21/26 (81) | 31/34 (91) | 47/48 (98) | NA | NA |
| Respondents indicating: | |||||||
| Interest in attending another HER | 45/46 (98) | 22/23 (96) | 23/26 (88) | 32/33 (97) | NA | NA | NA |
| Elements of the content were inappropriate or offensive | 2/46 (4) | 2/22 (9) | 1/27 (4) | 1/34 (3) | 0/47 (0) | 2/48 (4) | 0/48 (0) |
| Attending HER will impact their clinical practice | 33/44 (75) | 20/22 (91) | 20/26 (77) | 23/29 (79) | 47/47 (100) | NA | NA |
Abbreviation: HER, Health Equity Rounds; NA, not asked.
Attendance for HER 1-4 was estimated based on faculty continuing medical education credit sign-in sheet and survey responses plus residents and medical students scheduled for mandatory attendance. Attendance for HER 5-7 was based on in-room head count.
In HER 2, medical students included applicants to the pediatric residency program.
The topical focus of HER 3 was spanking. Attendees were asked whether the conference met the objective to “identify personal biases associated with spanking.”
In HER 3, attendees were asked whether the conference met the objective to “provide educational resources and opportunities for advocacy surrounding discipline.”