Center for Social Justice and Health Equity, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
Harvard Medical School, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
West J Emerg Med. 2023 Sep;24(5):906-918. doi: 10.5811/westjem.58408.
An overwhelming body of evidence points to an inextricable link between race and health disparities in the United States. Although race is best understood as a social construct, its role in health outcomes has historically been attributed to increasingly debunked theories of underlying biological and genetic differences across races. Recently, growing calls for health equity and social justice have raised awareness of the impact of implicit bias and structural racism on social determinants of health, healthcare quality, and ultimately, health outcomes. This more nuanced recognition of the role of race in health disparities has, in turn, facilitated introspective racial disparities research, root cause analyses, and changes in practice within the medical community. Examining the complex interplay between race, social determinants of health, and health outcomes allows systems of health to create mechanisms for checks and balances that mitigate unfair and avoidable health inequalities. As one of the specialties most intertwined with social medicine, emergency medicine (EM) is ideally positioned to address racism in medicine, develop health equity metrics, monitor disparities in clinical performance data, identify research gaps, implement processes and policies to eliminate racial health inequities, and promote anti-racist ideals as advocates for structural change. In this critical review our aim was to (a) provide a synopsis of racial disparities across a broad scope of clinical pathology interests addressed in emergency departments-communicable diseases, non-communicable conditions, and injuries-and (b) through a race-conscious analysis, develop EM practice recommendations for advancing a culture of equity with the potential for measurable impact on healthcare quality and health outcomes.
大量证据表明,在美国,种族与健康差异之间存在着不可分割的联系。尽管种族最好被理解为一种社会建构,但它在健康结果中的作用在历史上归因于越来越多被揭穿的关于不同种族之间潜在的生物和遗传差异的理论。最近,越来越多的人呼吁公平和社会正义,这提高了人们对隐性偏见和结构性种族主义对健康决定因素、医疗质量以及最终健康结果的影响的认识。这种对种族在健康差异中作用的更细致的认识反过来又促进了医学领域内的内省性种族差异研究、根本原因分析和实践的改变。检查种族、健康决定因素和健康结果之间的复杂相互作用,可以使卫生系统建立制衡机制,减轻不公平和可避免的健康不平等。作为与社会医学联系最紧密的专业之一,急诊医学(EM)最适合解决医学中的种族主义问题、制定健康公平指标、监测临床绩效数据中的差异、发现研究差距、实施消除种族健康不平等的流程和政策,并倡导结构性变革,以实现公平。在这篇重要的综述中,我们的目的是:(a)总结在急诊部门中广泛涉及的临床病理学领域的种族差异——传染病、非传染性疾病和伤害;(b)通过种族意识分析,为推进公平文化制定急诊医学实践建议,有可能对医疗质量和健康结果产生可衡量的影响。