| Literature DB >> 32838627 |
Anna Lisa Crowley1, Julie Damp2, Melanie S Sulistio3, Kathryn Berlacher4, Donna M Polk5, Robert A Hong6, Gaby Weissman7, Dorothy Jackson8, Chittur A Sivaram9, James A Arrighi10, Andrew M Kates11, Claire S Duvernoy12, Sandra J Lewis13, Quinn Capers14.
Abstract
Background The lack of diversity in the cardiovascular physician workforce is thought to be an important driver of racial and sex disparities in cardiac care. Cardiology fellowship program directors play a critical role in shaping the cardiology workforce. Methods and Results To assess program directors' perceptions about diversity and barriers to enhancing diversity, the authors conducted a survey of 513 fellowship program directors or associate directors from 193 unique adult cardiology fellowship training programs. The response rate was 21% of all individuals (110/513) representing 57% of US general adult cardiology training programs (110/193). While 69% of respondents endorsed the belief that diversity is a driver of excellence in health care, only 26% could quote 1 to 2 references to support this statement. Sixty-three percent of respondents agreed that "our program is diverse already so diversity does not need to be increased." Only 6% of respondents listed diversity as a top 3 priority when creating the cardiovascular fellowship rank list. Conclusions These findings suggest that while program directors generally believe that diversity enhances quality, they are less familiar with the literature that supports that contention and they may not share a unified definition of "diversity." This may result in diversity enhancement having a low priority. The authors propose several strategies to engage fellowship training program directors in efforts to diversify cardiology fellowship training programs.Entities:
Keywords: disparities; diversity in cardiology; implicit bias; training program directors
Year: 2020 PMID: 32838627 PMCID: PMC7660759 DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.120.017196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Heart Assoc ISSN: 2047-9980 Impact factor: 5.501
Figure 1Top 3 criteria considered when ranking candidates (% of respondents who considered criterion a “top 3” priority, n=110).
USMLE indicates United States Medical Licensing Exam.
Barriers to Increasing Diversity and Proposed Actions
| Barriers/Misperceptions | Actions |
|---|---|
| Lack of familiarity with diversity literature | Required readings/modules for PDs/APDs |
| “Diversity does not need to be enhanced …” | Compare program demographics to local/target community |
| Diversity not a priority when ranking | Make “diversity/ability to enhance cultural competency” a top 3 priority when ranking |
| PDs indifferent to “recruiting” | Recruit actively for diversity in immediate pipeline |
| Develop “deep pipeline” of talent from local HS and universities |
APD indicates Associate Program Director; HS, high school; and PD, Program Director.
Key References on the Benefits of Female Physicians
| Female Physicians More Likely to Provide Patient‐Centered Care, Guideline‐based Care, and May Have Better Outcomes |
|---|
| Baumhakel. Eur J Heart Fail. 2009 |
| Roter. Annu Rev Public Health. 2004 |
| Schmittdiel. J Women’s Health (Larchmt). 2009 |
| Tsugawa. JAMA Intern Med. 2017 |
| Cooper‐Patrick. JAMA. 1999 |
Key References on the Benefits of URM Physicians
| Minority Physicians More Likely to Serve the Underserved; Minority Patients Prefer Race‐Concordant Physicians and More Likely to Comply With Recommendations by Minority Physicians |
|---|
| Jackson. Public Health Rep. 2014 |
| Marrast. JAMA Intern Med. 2014 |
| Brotherton. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2000 |
| Cooper. Ann Intern Med. 2003 |
| Gordon. Cancer. 2006 |
| Traylor. J Gen Intern Med. 2010 |
| Alsan. Am Econ Rev. 2019 |
| Saha. J Gen Intern Med. 2020 |
URM indicates underrepresented minority.