| Literature DB >> 35923427 |
Jessica P Cerdeña1,2, Emmanuella Ngozi Asabor1,3, Marie V Plaisime4,5, Rachel R Hardeman6.
Abstract
Background: Race-based practices in medical education and clinical care may exacerbate health inequities. Misguided use of race in popular point-of-care clinical decision-making tools like UpToDate® may promote harmful practices of race-based medicine. This article investigates the nature of mentions of Black/African American race in UpToDate®.Entities:
Keywords: Black/African American; Clinical decision-making; Point-of-care; Racism; UptoDate
Year: 2022 PMID: 35923427 PMCID: PMC9340501 DOI: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2022.101581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EClinicalMedicine ISSN: 2589-5370
Figure 1Flow diagram for data collection arriving at final sample of 208 documents.
Thematic codes, definitions, prevalence, and representative quotes.
| Code | Definition | Prevalence ( | Representative quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ancestry as code for race/ethnicity | This | 5 (2.4) | “The Study of Environment, Lifestyle, and Fibroids (SELF) trial is specifically studying risk factors such as vitamin D deficiency and African ancestry among African American women.” “BEN is most common in people of African descent, West Indians, Sephardic Jews, Yemenites, Greeks, and Arabs, but it may be seen in individuals of any ancestry.” |
| ancestry + disease condition | This | 15 (7.2) | “Ethnicity may modify C-peptide levels in children with new onset T1DM, with Hispanic (but not African American children) demonstrating higher C-peptide levels than non-Hispanic white children, after controlling for confounders.” “A 45-year-old black man is noted to have a blood pressure of 150/100. He has been hypertensive for at least 10 years. What abnormality is shown on the electrocardiogram?” |
| biologization of race / decontextualized epidemiology | This | 176 (84.6) | “Ethnicity and age are additional factors that appear to impact the vaginal microbial community.” “However, it should be recognized that the Duffy null phenotype is not specific for BEN, as it is present in the large majority of Blacks, yet most do not have BEN.” “Failure to initiate breastfeeding is associated with the following maternal characteristics: Non-Hispanic black.” |
| genetics + race/ethnicity | This | 46 (22.1) | “Although low birth weight and bias in diagnosis based upon the patient's race may be involved, the recognition of an association between two independent sequence variants in the apolipoprotein 1 (APOL1) gene on chromosome 22 and renal disease in African Americans, including focal segmental glomerular sclerosis and hypertension-related ESRD, provides a much more likely pathophysiologic mechanism and suggests that hypertensive nephrosclerosis in black and white patients may be distinct diseases.” “Why black patients preferentially develop the class IV sclerosing lesion is unclear, but it may be related to genetic factors such as polymorphisms in APOL-1” |
| social/structural context | This | 36 (17.3) | “Black men were approximately 50 percent less likely to be referred to a medical oncologist and to receive chemotherapy, but these differences were also not statistically significant.” “In this regard, an analysis showed that the higher risk of death in African-American (asthma) patients compared to white patients is not explained by race differences in deaths occurring in hospital and are therefore likely due to differences that precede hospitalization, such as differences in management at home or during transportation to the emergency department.” |
| behavioral/cultural | This | 17 (8.2) | “black patients more frequently ingest a high-sodium/low-potassium diet” “On average, African-American parents believed in starting toilet training at 18 months of age, in comparison with 25 months of age for Caucasian parents” |
| Black populations understudied | This | 16 (7.7) | “nonpharmacologic interventions to lower blood pressure have not been well studied in black populations” “Most studies examining smoking as a risk factor for prostate cancer have focused on white populations.” |
| race-specific research | This | 25 (12.0) | “One study randomized 46 black men with severe untreated hypertension to antihypertensive therapy alone or with regular exercise…” “A randomized trial assigned 742 patients with moderate-to-severe asthma who were of African American descent to budesonide-formoterol (320 microg-9microg twice daily) or budesonide (320 microg twice daily) for 52 weeks.” |
| race-specific treatment | This | 39 (18.8) | “Suspicion for a diagnosis of central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia (CCCA) should arise in a patient with clinical findings of a centrifugally expanding area of alopecia on the central scalp, especially when the patient is a woman of African descent.” “If monotherapy is used for black hypertensive patients, we suggest a dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker, although a thiazide diuretic such as chlorthalidone is a reasonable alternative” |
| skin pigment | This | 2 (1.0) | “Lesions can also be skin colored or pigmented, particularly in individuals with darker skin types.” “Other potential explanations for apparent differences in outcome according to race include… difficulty in interpreting skin findings (eg, cutaneous GVHD) in patients with dark skin complexion.” |
Code developed during analysis.
Figure 2Waffle plot demonstrating the prevalence of themes across documents. Biologization of race occurred most commonly, followed by both biologization of race and racialized research and practice, then racialized research and practice alone. Red indicates biologitization of race, blue indicates racialized research and practice, an yellow indicates both.