普通外科教科书中的肤色反映出外科教育缺乏种族和民族多样性

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
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引用次数: 0

摘要

简介:医疗保健中的差异是一个重要而及时的话题。1 教学材料中病理学的视觉表现是外科疾病决策的关键因素之一,可能会导致代表性不足的肤色群体的治疗效果出现差异。我们的假设是,主要外科教材中的临床病理学视觉示例(插图)存在偏差,因为它们偏重于白种人的肤色,因此不能准确代表美国人口中患者的种族分布。这些图片包括人体照片和卡通图片(在可以确定肤色的情况下),并显示了足够的皮肤。这些图像被分配了一个菲茨帕特里克皮肤照片类型 (FP) 分数(1-6)。我们将 6 个 FP 类别中的图像分布与之前的美国国家健康与营养调查(NHANES)中描述的美国人口图像的预期分布进行了比较。结果从所选的 4 本教科书中,共有 556 幅图像被认为足以进行评估。其中 169 幅来自 Sabiston,61 幅来自 Mulholland 和 Greenfield,177 幅来自 Schwartz,149 幅来自 ACS。其中约 539 张图片(96.9%)描绘的是肤色较浅的患者(FP 分数为 1-3),只有不到 4% 的图片描绘的是肤色较深的人(FP 分数在 4-6 之间)。教科书审稿人之间存在 1.8% 的分析差异。美国普通人群(NHANES)的分布情况如下:结论对常用普外科教科书的筛查显示,与美国总人口相比,基于图像的肤色表现明显缺乏多样性。绝大多数图像都是浅肤色。改善教材(如基础教科书)中图像的多样性可能有助于减少未来观察到的外科患者治疗效果的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lack of Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Surgical Education, as Reflected by Skin Tone in General Surgery Textbooks

INTRODUCTION

Disparity in healthcare is an important and timely topic. One example of such disparity appears to be the disproportionate use of lighter skin tone illustrations in medical and surgical educational material.1 Visual representation of pathology in instructional material is one key element that informs decision making in surgical disease and could contribute to disparity in outcomes in underrepresented tonal groups. Our hypothesis is that visual examples (illustrations) of clinical pathology in major surgical texts are biased in that they are heavily weighted to Caucasian skin tones and therefore fail to accurately represent the racial distribution of patients in the United States population.

METHODS

Images from 4 commonly used general surgery textbooks were screened independently by 2 reviewers from Maimonides Medical Center and SUNY (State University of New York) Downstate College of Medicine. Human photographic and cartoon images (where skin tone could be determined), with adequate skin shown, were included. These images were assigned a Fitzpatrick skin photo type (FP) score (1-6). The distribution of images among the 6 FP categories were compared to the expected distribution of images in the United States population, as described from a previous National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Differences in distribution were compared using a chi-squared test, with p-value <0.05 considered as statistically significant.

RESULTS

There were 556 total images deemed adequate for assessment from the 4 textbooks chosen. 169 from Sabiston, 61 from Mulholland and Greenfield, 177 from Schwartz, and 149 from ACS. About 539 of these images (96.9%) were depictions of patients with light skin tone (FP scores 1-3.) while less than 4% of images were of dark-skinned individuals (FP score between 4 and 6.) An FP score 1 accounted for most images, comprising 477 images (86.1%). There was a 1.8% analytical discrepancy noted between the textbook reviewers. The distribution on the general US population (NHANES) is: FP score 1: 1.6%, FP score 2: 33.1%, FP score 3: 47.8%, FP score 4: 4.9%, FP score 5: 3.6%, FP score 6: 9.0%.

CONCLUSIONS

Screening of commonly used general surgery textbooks showed a significant lack of diversity in image-based skin tone representation when compared to the United States population at large. The overwhelming majority of images were of light skin tones. Improving diversity of imagery in educational material, such as basic textbooks, might help reduce observed disparities in outcomes among surgical patients in the future.

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来源期刊
Journal of Surgical Education
Journal of Surgical Education EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES-SURGERY
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
10.30%
发文量
261
审稿时长
48 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Surgical Education (JSE) is dedicated to advancing the field of surgical education through original research. The journal publishes research articles in all surgical disciplines on topics relative to the education of surgical students, residents, and fellows, as well as practicing surgeons. Our readers look to JSE for timely, innovative research findings from the international surgical education community. As the official journal of the Association of Program Directors in Surgery (APDS), JSE publishes the proceedings of the annual APDS meeting held during Surgery Education Week.
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