A Case of a Micronesian Woman in Hawai'i with Lymphoma and the Role of Implicit Bias in Medicine Affecting Her Care.

Q4 Medicine
Kory M Johnson, Emma Fixsen, David J Elpern, Douglas W Johnson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Medically indigent patients, patients of color, those with insufficient health insurance, or patients with severe diseases have a high rate of poor health care quality caused by unconscious implicit and explicit biases. Awareness of the relationship between unconscious implicit bias and negative health care outcomes is increasing in the health care community. The objective of this case study was to examine implicit biases that negatively affected the patient care of a young Micronesian woman with a severe cutaneous disease in Hawai'i. Her medical care and death may have been affected by a combination of implicit biases, including bias based on her race, type of health insurance, and underlying disease. Implicit biases and their role in health care disparities are often unintentional and not obvious. Increased awareness by health care providers may help to avoid inequities in clinical decision-making and improve outcomes.

一例密克罗尼西亚妇女在夏威夷淋巴瘤和隐性偏见的作用在医学影响她的护理。
医疗贫困患者、有色人种患者、没有足够医疗保险的患者或患有严重疾病的患者,由于无意识的隐性和显性偏见而导致的医疗质量低下的比例很高。在卫生保健社区,对无意识内隐偏见和消极卫生保健结果之间关系的认识正在增加。本案例研究的目的是研究对夏威夷一位患有严重皮肤病的年轻密克罗尼西亚妇女的患者护理产生负面影响的内隐偏见。她的医疗和死亡可能受到隐性偏见的综合影响,包括基于她的种族、健康保险类型和潜在疾病的偏见。内隐偏见及其在医疗保健差异中的作用往往是无意的,也不明显。提高卫生保健提供者的认识可能有助于避免临床决策中的不公平现象并改善结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.50
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