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小儿矫形外科中的隐性种族偏见。

Implicit Racial Bias in Pediatric Orthopaedic Surgery.

机构信息

Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.

出版信息

J Pediatr Orthop. 2022 Aug 1;42(7):393-399. doi: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000002170. Epub 2022 May 9.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Racial and ethnic minority patients continue to experience disparities in health care. It is important to understand provider-level factors that may contribute to these inequities. This study aims to evaluate the presence of implicit racial bias among pediatric orthopaedic surgeons and determine the relationship between bias and clinical decision making.

METHODS

A web-based survey was distributed to 415 pediatric orthopaedic surgeons. One section measured for potential implicit racial bias using a child-race implicit association test (IAT). IAT scores were compared with US physicians and the US general population using publicly available data. Another section consisted of clinical vignettes with associated questions. For each vignette, surgeons were randomly assigned a single race-version, White or Black. Vignette questions were grouped into an opioid recommendation, management decision, or patient perception category for analysis based on subject tested. Vignette answers from surgeons with IAT scores that were concordant with their randomized vignette race-version (ie, surgeon with pro-White score assigned White vignette version) were compared with those that were discordant.

RESULTS

IAT results were obtained from 119 surveyed surgeons (29% response rate). Overall, respondents showed a minor pro-White implicit bias ( P <0.001). Implicit bias of any strength toward either race was present among 103/119 (87%) surgeons. The proportion of pediatric orthopaedic surgeons with a strong pro-White implicit bias (29%) was greater than that of US physicians overall (21%, P =0.032) and the US general population (19%, P =0.004). No differences were found in overall opioid recommendations, management decisions, or patient perceptions between concordant and discordant groups.

CONCLUSION

Most of the pediatric orthopaedic surgeons surveyed demonstrated implicit racial bias on IAT testing, with a large proportion demonstrating strong pro-White bias. Despite an association between implicit bias and clinical decision making in the literature, this study observed no evidence that implicit racial bias affected the management of pediatric fractures.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE

Level IV.

摘要

简介

少数民族和少数族裔患者在医疗保健方面仍然存在差异。了解可能导致这些不平等的提供者层面的因素很重要。本研究旨在评估小儿矫形外科医生中是否存在隐性种族偏见,并确定偏见与临床决策之间的关系。

方法

我们向 415 名小儿矫形外科医生分发了一份基于网络的调查问卷。其中一节使用儿童种族内隐联想测验(IAT)来衡量潜在的隐性种族偏见。使用公开提供的数据,将 IAT 评分与美国医生和美国一般人群进行比较。另一部分由具有相关问题的临床病例组成。对于每个病例,外科医生随机分配到一个单一的种族版本,白种人或黑人。根据受测试者,将病例问题分为阿片类药物推荐、管理决策或患者感知类别进行分析。将 IAT 评分与随机分配的病例种族版本一致的外科医生(即,具有亲白种人评分的外科医生被分配白种人病例版本)的病例答案与那些不一致的病例答案进行比较。

结果

从接受调查的 119 名外科医生中获得了 IAT 结果(29%的回复率)。总体而言,受访者表现出轻微的亲白种人隐性偏见( P <0.001)。119 名外科医生中有 103 名(87%)对任何种族都存在隐性偏见。具有强烈亲白种人隐性偏见的小儿矫形外科医生比例(29%)大于美国总体医生(21%, P =0.032)和美国一般人群(19%, P =0.004)。在一致和不一致组之间,阿片类药物总体推荐、管理决策或患者感知没有差异。

结论

在 IAT 测试中,大多数接受调查的小儿矫形外科医生表现出隐性种族偏见,其中很大一部分表现出强烈的亲白人偏见。尽管文献中存在隐性偏见与临床决策之间的关联,但本研究没有证据表明隐性种族偏见影响小儿骨折的治疗。

证据水平

四级。

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