ALERT: This system is being upgraded on Tuesday December 12. It will not be available
for use for several hours that day while the upgrade is in progress. Deposits to DukeSpace
will be disabled on Monday December 11, so no new items are to be added to the repository
while the upgrade is in progress. Everything should be back to normal by the end of
day, December 12.
The Impact of Racial Bias in Patient Care and Medical Education: Let's Focus on the Educator.
Abstract
<h4>Introduction</h4>Racial bias in health care is well documented. Research shows
the presence of racial bias among health care providers. There is a paucity of workshops
focused on racial bias effects in health professions educators.<h4>Method</h4>Two
to three workshops were delivered to a diverse group of clinical educators from three
programs at a major academic institution. Each workshop included a brief multimedia
presentation followed by a facilitated group discussion. Participants completed the
online Implicit Association Test (IAT), a baseline demographic questionnaire, and
a brief post-then-pre questionnaire.<h4>Results</h4>Twenty-four faculty participated
in the study (six physicians, eight nurse practitioners, 10 physician assistants).
Nineteen (90%) were women, 18 (86%) were White, nine (43%) had more than 10 years
of experience as educators, and seven (35%) had previously participated in a biases
program. Seventeen completed the IAT. Sixteen educators agreed or strongly agreed
that bias has a significant impact on patients' outcomes at the end of the workshop
compared to 17 before the workshop. Seventeen educators agreed or strongly agreed
that recognizing their own racial bias would positively alter their teaching practice
after the workshop compared to 15 before the workshop.<h4>Discussion</h4>This series
of workshops was created to fill a gap regarding the impact of racial bias on patient
outcomes, health disparities, and health professions education. The impact of racial
bias in health professions education and the long-term impact of awareness and knowledge
of racial bias in education are areas needing further evaluation.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23867Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11183Publication Info
Corsino, Leonor; Railey, Kenyon; Brooks, Katherine; Ostrovsky, Daniel; Pinheiro, Sandro
O; McGhan-Johnson, Alyson; & Padilla, Blanca Iris (2021). The Impact of Racial Bias in Patient Care and Medical Education: Let's Focus on the
Educator. MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources, 17. pp. 11183. 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11183. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23867.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
Collections
More Info
Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Leonor Corsino
Associate Professor of Medicine
Dr. Leonor Corsino is a Board- Certified Adult Endocrinologist, an experienced physician-scientist,
and an organizational and health professional education leader. She offers an extensive
and diverse leadership background with successfully implementing innovative clinical,
research, and workforce development and education programs. Her expertise and strengths
lie in her diverse portfolio that expands from basic science to clinical and community-engaged
research, innovative curriculum developm
Daniel Allen Ostrovsky
Associate Professor of Pediatrics
Resident Education Clinical medicine and pediatric primary care Information Technology
Coding and Billing
Sandro Pinheiro de Oliveira
Professor in Medicine
Dr. Pinheiro directs faculty development activities for clinical and basic science
faculty, designs medical and interprofessional education curricula, coaches/mentors
medical faculty and fellows, and conducts evaluation and research in medical and interprofessional
education. His educational competencies are in the areas of adult learning, instructional
strategies, active learning, curriculum design and evaluation, and qualitative inquiry.
His research activities focus on medical and interpro
Kenyon Michael Railey
Associate Professor in Family Medicine and Community Health
Dr. Kenyon Michael Railey, MD currently serves as Associate Professor in the Department
of Family Medicine & Community Health and the Medical Director of the Physician Assistant
Program. He also serves as the inaugural Vice Chair of Equity, Diversity & Inclusion
for the Department of Community & Family Medicine and Course Director for the Cultural
Determinants of health & Health Disparities (CDHD) curriculum in the School of Medicine
MD Program. This is the first ever req
Alphabetical list of authors with Scholars@Duke profiles.

Articles written by Duke faculty are made available through the campus open access policy. For more information see: Duke Open Access Policy
Rights for Collection: Scholarly Articles
Works are deposited here by their authors, and represent their research and opinions, not that of Duke University. Some materials and descriptions may include offensive content. More info