Khadijah Breathett1, Erika Yee2, Natalie Pool3, Megan Hebdon4, Janice D Crist3, Ryan H Yee2, Shannon M Knapp5, Sade Solola6, Luis Luy7, Kathryn Herrera-Theut8, Leanne Zabala9, Jeff Stone10, Marylyn M McEwen3, Elizabeth Calhoun11, Nancy K Sweitzer1. 1. Sarver Heart Center, Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson. 2. Sarver Heart Center, Clinical Research Office, University of Arizona, Tucson. 3. College of Nursing, University of Arizona, Tucson. 4. College of Nursing, University of Utah, Salt Lake City. 5. Statistics Consulting Lab, Bio5 Institute, University of Arizona, Tucson. 6. Department of Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson. 7. University of Rochester, New York. 8. University of Arizona Medical School, Tucson. 9. Department of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles. 10. Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson. 11. Center for Population Health Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson.
Abstract
Importance: Racial bias is associated with the allocation of advanced heart failure therapies, heart transplants, and ventricular assist devices. It is unknown whether gender and racial biases are associated with the allocation of advanced therapies among women. Objective: To determine whether the intersection of patient gender and race is associated with the decision-making of clinicians during the allocation of advanced heart failure therapies. Design, Setting, and Participants: In this qualitative study, 46 US clinicians attending a conference for an international heart transplant organization in April 2019 were interviewed on the allocation of advanced heart failure therapies. Participants were randomized to examine clinical vignettes that varied 1:1 by patient race (African American to white) and 20:3 by gender (women to men) to purposefully target vignettes of women patients to compare with a prior study of vignettes of men patients. Participants were interviewed about their decision-making process using the think-aloud technique and provided supplemental surveys. Interviews were analyzed using grounded theory methodology, and surveys were analyzed with Wilcoxon tests. Exposure: Randomization to clinical vignettes. Main Outcomes and Measures: Thematic differences in allocation of advanced therapies by patient race and gender. Results: Among 46 participants (24 [52%] women, 20 [43%] racial minority), participants were randomized to the vignette of a white woman (20 participants [43%]), an African American woman (20 participants [43%]), a white man (3 participants [7%]), and an African American man (3 participants [7%]). Allocation differences centered on 5 themes. First, clinicians critiqued the appearance of the women more harshly than the men as part of their overall impressions. Second, the African American man was perceived as experiencing more severe illness than individuals from other racial and gender groups. Third, there was more concern regarding appropriateness of prior care of the African American woman compared with the white woman. Fourth, there were greater concerns about adequacy of social support for the women than for the men. Children were perceived as liabilities for women, particularly the African American woman. Family dynamics and finances were perceived to be greater concerns for the African American woman than for individuals in the other vignettes; spouses were deemed inadequate support for women. Last, participants recommended ventricular assist devices over transplantation for all racial and gender groups. Surveys revealed no statistically significant differences in allocation recommendations for African American and white women patients. Conclusions and Relevance: This national study of health care professionals randomized to clinical vignettes that varied only by gender and race found evidence of gender and race bias in the decision-making process for offering advanced therapies for heart failure, particularly for African American women patients, who were judged more harshly by appearance and adequacy of social support. There was no associated between patient gender and race and final recommendations for allocation of advanced therapies. However, it is possible that bias may contribute to delayed allocation and ultimately inequity in the allocation of advanced therapies in a clinical setting.
RCT Entities:
Importance: Racial bias is associated with the allocation of advanced heart failure therapies, heart transplants, and ventricular assist devices. It is unknown whether gender and racial biases are associated with the allocation of advanced therapies among women. Objective: To determine whether the intersection of patient gender and race is associated with the decision-making of clinicians during the allocation of advanced heart failure therapies. Design, Setting, and Participants: In this qualitative study, 46 US clinicians attending a conference for an international heart transplant organization in April 2019 were interviewed on the allocation of advanced heart failure therapies. Participants were randomized to examine clinical vignettes that varied 1:1 by patient race (African American to white) and 20:3 by gender (women to men) to purposefully target vignettes of womenpatients to compare with a prior study of vignettes of menpatients. Participants were interviewed about their decision-making process using the think-aloud technique and provided supplemental surveys. Interviews were analyzed using grounded theory methodology, and surveys were analyzed with Wilcoxon tests. Exposure: Randomization to clinical vignettes. Main Outcomes and Measures: Thematic differences in allocation of advanced therapies by patient race and gender. Results: Among 46 participants (24 [52%] women, 20 [43%] racial minority), participants were randomized to the vignette of a white woman (20 participants [43%]), an African American woman (20 participants [43%]), a white man (3 participants [7%]), and an African American man (3 participants [7%]). Allocation differences centered on 5 themes. First, clinicians critiqued the appearance of the women more harshly than the men as part of their overall impressions. Second, the African American man was perceived as experiencing more severe illness than individuals from other racial and gender groups. Third, there was more concern regarding appropriateness of prior care of the African American woman compared with the white woman. Fourth, there were greater concerns about adequacy of social support for the women than for the men. Children were perceived as liabilities for women, particularly the African American woman. Family dynamics and finances were perceived to be greater concerns for the African American woman than for individuals in the other vignettes; spouses were deemed inadequate support for women. Last, participants recommended ventricular assist devices over transplantation for all racial and gender groups. Surveys revealed no statistically significant differences in allocation recommendations for African American and white womenpatients. Conclusions and Relevance: This national study of health care professionals randomized to clinical vignettes that varied only by gender and race found evidence of gender and race bias in the decision-making process for offering advanced therapies for heart failure, particularly for African American womenpatients, who were judged more harshly by appearance and adequacy of social support. There was no associated between patient gender and race and final recommendations for allocation of advanced therapies. However, it is possible that bias may contribute to delayed allocation and ultimately inequity in the allocation of advanced therapies in a clinical setting.
Authors: David Feldman; Salpy V Pamboukian; Jeffrey J Teuteberg; Emma Birks; Katherine Lietz; Stephanie A Moore; Jeffrey A Morgan; Francisco Arabia; Mary E Bauman; Hoger W Buchholz; Mario Deng; Marc L Dickstein; Aly El-Banayosy; Tonya Elliot; Daniel J Goldstein; Kathleen L Grady; Kylie Jones; Katarzyna Hryniewicz; Ranjit John; Annemarie Kaan; Shimon Kusne; Matthias Loebe; M Patricia Massicotte; Nader Moazami; Paul Mohacsi; Martha Mooney; Thomas Nelson; Francis Pagani; William Perry; Evgenij V Potapov; J Eduardo Rame; Stuart D Russell; Erik N Sorensen; Benjamin Sun; Martin Strueber; Abeel A Mangi; Michael G Petty; Joseph Rogers Journal: J Heart Lung Transplant Date: 2013-02 Impact factor: 10.247
Authors: Ersilia M DeFilippis; Lauren K Truby; A Reshad Garan; Raymond C Givens; Koji Takeda; Hiroo Takayama; Yoshifumi Naka; Jennifer H Haythe; Maryjane A Farr; Veli K Topkara Journal: JACC Heart Fail Date: 2019-03 Impact factor: 12.035
Authors: M Colvin; J M Smith; N Hadley; M A Skeans; K Uccellini; R Lehman; A M Robinson; A K Israni; J J Snyder; B L Kasiske Journal: Am J Transplant Date: 2019-02 Impact factor: 8.086
Authors: Khadijah Breathett; Larry A Allen; Laura Helmkamp; Kathryn Colborn; Stacie L Daugherty; Irene V Blair; Jacqueline Jones; Prateeti Khazanie; Sula Mazimba; Marylyn McEwen; Jeff Stone; Elizabeth Calhoun; Nancy K Sweitzer; Pamela N Peterson Journal: Circ Heart Fail Date: 2018-08 Impact factor: 8.790
Authors: Khadijah Breathett; Larry A Allen; Laura Helmkamp; Kathryn Colborn; Stacie L Daugherty; Prateeti Khazanie; Richard Lindrooth; Pamela N Peterson Journal: JACC Heart Fail Date: 2017-01-18 Impact factor: 12.035
Authors: Khadijah Breathett; Jacqueline Jones; Hillary D Lum; Dawn Koonkongsatian; Christine D Jones; Urvi Sanghvi; Lilian Hoffecker; Marylyn McEwen; Stacie L Daugherty; Irene V Blair; Elizabeth Calhoun; Esther de Groot; Nancy K Sweitzer; Pamela N Peterson Journal: J Racial Ethn Health Disparities Date: 2018-03-05
Authors: Khadijah Breathett; Wenhui G Liu; Larry A Allen; Stacie L Daugherty; Irene V Blair; Jacqueline Jones; Gary K Grunwald; Marc Moss; Tyree H Kiser; Ellen Burnham; R William Vandivier; Brendan J Clark; Eldrin F Lewis; Sula Mazimba; Catherine Battaglia; P Michael Ho; Pamela N Peterson Journal: JACC Heart Fail Date: 2018-05 Impact factor: 12.035
Authors: Steven A Farmer; James N Kirkpatrick; Paul A Heidenreich; Jeptha P Curtis; Yongfei Wang; Peter W Groeneveld Journal: Heart Rhythm Date: 2008-12-13 Impact factor: 6.343
Authors: Tarryn Tertulien; Mary B Roberts; Charles B Eaton; Crystal W Cene; Giselle Corbie-Smith; JoAnn E Manson; Matthew Allison; Rami Nassir; Khadijah Breathett Journal: Am Heart J Date: 2022-01-06 Impact factor: 4.749
Authors: Khadijah K Breathett; Haolin Xu; Nancy K Sweitzer; Elizabeth Calhoun; Roland A Matsouaka; Clyde W Yancy; Gregg C Fonarow; Adam D DeVore; Deepak L Bhatt; Pamela N Peterson Journal: Am Heart J Date: 2021-11-20 Impact factor: 4.749
Authors: Tasmeen Hussain; Keira Nassetta; Linda C O'Dwyer; Jane E Wilcox; Sherif M Badawy Journal: Transplant Rev (Orlando) Date: 2021-09-20 Impact factor: 3.943
Authors: Rebecca S Steinberg; Aditi Nayak; Michael A Burke; Morgan Aldridge; S Raja Laskar; Kunal Bhatt; Lakshmi Sridharan; Mahmoud Abdou; Tamer Attia; Andrew Smith; Mani Daneshmand; J David Vega; Divya Gupta; Alanna A Morris Journal: Clin Transplant Date: 2021-10-26 Impact factor: 2.863
Authors: Christopher E Knoepke; Bonnie Siry-Bove; Caitlin Mayton; Abigail Latimer; Jan Hart; Larry A Allen; Stacie L Daugherty; Colleen K McIlvennan; Daniel D Matlock; Prateeti Khazanie Journal: Circ Heart Fail Date: 2022-07-07 Impact factor: 10.447
Authors: Sameed Ahmed M Khatana; Thomas C Hanff; Ashwin S Nathan; Elias J Dayoub; E Wilson Grandin; J Eduardo Rame; Alexander C Fanaroff; Jay Giri; Peter W Groeneveld Journal: Circ Heart Fail Date: 2021-05-15 Impact factor: 8.790