| Literature DB >> 33803942 |
Nadha Hassen1, Aisha Lofters2,3, Sinit Michael4, Amita Mall5, Andrew D Pinto3,6,7,8, Julia Rackal3,8.
Abstract
Racism towards Black, Indigenous and people of colour continues to exist in the healthcare system. This leads to profound harm for people who use and work within these settings. This is a scoping review to identify anti-racism interventions in outpatient healthcare settings. Searching the peer-reviewed and grey literature, articles were screened for inclusion by at least two independent reviewers. Synthesizing the socio-ecological levels of interventions with inductively identifying themes, a conceptual model for implementing anti-racism interventions in healthcare settings is presented. In total, 37 peer-reviewed articles were included in the review, with 12 empirical studies and 25 theoretical or conceptual papers. Six grey literature documents were also included. Healthcare institutions need to incorporate an explicit, shared language of anti-racism. Anti-racism action should incorporate leadership buy-in and commitment with dedicated resources, support and funding; a multi-level approach beginning with policy and organizational interventions; transparent accountability mechanisms for sustainable change; long-term meaningful partnerships with Black, Indigenous, and people of colour (i.e., racialized communities); and ongoing, mandatory, tailored staff education and training. Decision-makers and staff in healthcare settings have a responsibility to take anti-racism action and may improve the success and sustainability of their efforts by incorporating the foundational principles and strategies identified in this paper.Entities:
Keywords: anti-racism interventions; healthcare interventions; institutional racism; social determinants of health; systemic racism
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33803942 PMCID: PMC8000324 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18062993
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram for peer-reviewed literature.
Summary of results from peer-reviewed literature (n = 37).
| Country | Number of Articles (%) |
|---|---|
| United States of America [ | 19 (51%) |
| Canada [ | 5 (14%) |
| United Kingdom [ | 4 (11%) |
| Australia [ | 6 (16%) |
| New Zealand [ | 3 (8%) |
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| Nurses [ | 8 (22%) |
| Physicians [ | 8 (22%) |
| Psychologists/Counsellors [ | 5 (11%) |
| Social Workers [ | 1 (3%) |
| Occupational Therapists [ | 1 (3%) |
| Pharmacists [ | 1 (3%) |
| Other/Not specified | 13 (35%) |
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| |
| Indigenous populations as a patient group (includes Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, Maori, First Nations, Inuit, and Metis/Native Americans) [ | 12 (32%) |
| Black populations as a patient group (includes Black and African American) [ | 5 (14%) |
| Other minority and racialized patient groups using terms like “minority groups”, “clients of colour”, “non-White”, “racial and ethnic minorities” | 12 (32%) |
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| Hospitals (outpatients) [ | 8 (21%) |
| Network or regional level with direct patient reach [ | 7(19%) |
| Primary care [ | 6 (14%) |
| Community-based settings providing outpatient care [ | 6(14%) |
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| |
| Individual [ | 20 (54%) |
| Interpersonal [ | 19 (51%) |
| Community [ | 8 (21%) |
| Organizational [ | 21 (57%) |
| Policy [ | 9 (24%) |
Examples of anti-racism interventions in healthcare settings by intervention-level.
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Deliver cultural competency training on providing culturally competent care (addressing concepts related to racism, unconscious or implicit bias, stereotype, prejudice) [ Provide continuous, ongoing training with an explicit anti-racism focus [ Incorporate critical reflection on knowledge, attitudes, beliefs and practice/reflexivity [ |
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Provide workshops for healthcare providers focusing on privilege and cultural competency training [ Incorporate reflective questions for cultural safe healthcare [ Develop and implement guidelines on how to address racist or prejudicial comments in psychotherapy [ |
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Develop ongoing, meaningful partnerships with Aboriginal/Indigenous stakeholders and communities [ Actively engage Aboriginal/Indigenous and racialized communities at multiple levels and throughout the process [ Reorganize power by strengthening community relationships and forming caucus groups for anti-racist community organizing [ |
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Develop a strategic leadership committee, consultation group, team (“charged with monitoring and addressing policies and practices, resource allocations, relational structures, organizational norms and values, and individual skills and attitudes”) [ Have commitment from leadership in organizational investment [ Ensure core leadership support that articulates diversity as a high institutional priority and organizational investment in supportive communication to all relevant stakeholders [ Implement counter-racism policy compliance procedures [ Build supports for Indigenous and racialized staff [ Identify and improve culturally unsafe systems and improve hospital and primary healthcare links [ Collect data to identify racial disparities and their sources [ Educate healthcare providers on anti-racism through several venues, grand rounds, newsletters, public relations campaigns, ongoing curricula, workshops [ Incorporate anti-racism into quality improvement initiatives [ |
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Recruit, retain, and promote Black, Indigenous and people of colour at all levels of the academic ladder in mainstream admission and promotion policy [ Increase infrastructure, accountability, transparency and monitoring [ Increase Maori/Indigenous participation and partnership in decision making through shared leadership in policymaking (e.g., use Maori/Indigenous models of health in policymaking) [ Mandate targets and actions [ Implement multiple strategies at policy, organizational, community, interpersonal, and individual levels simultaneously over a long period [ |
Figure 2Overview of the principles and strategies for anti-racism interventions in healthcare settings.