Changing How Race Is Portrayed in Medical Education: Recommendations From Medical Students.

Publication Type Academic Article
Authors Nieblas-Bedolla E, Christophers B, Nkinsi N, Schumann P, Stein E
Journal Acad Med
Volume 95
Issue 12
Pagination 1802-1806
Date Published 12/01/2020
ISSN 1938-808X
Keywords Education, Medical, Graduate, Healthcare Disparities, Racism, Students, Medical
Abstract The medical community has been complicit in legitimizing claims of racial difference throughout the history of the United States. Unfortunately, a rigorous examination of the role medicine plays in perpetuating inequity across racial lines is often missing in medical school curricula due to time constraints and other challenges inherent to medical education. The imprecise use of race-a social construct-as a proxy for pathology in medical education is a vestige of institutionalized racism. Recent examples are presented that illustrate how attributing outcomes to race may contribute to bias and unequal care. This paper proposes the following recommendations for guiding efforts to mitigate the adverse effects associated with the use of race in medical education: emphasize the need for incoming students to be familiar with how race can influence health outcomes; provide opportunities to hold open conversations about race in medicine among medical school faculty, students, and staff; craft and implement protocols that address and correct the inappropriate use of race in medical school classes and course materials; and encourage a large cultural shift within the field of medicine. Adoption of an interdisciplinary approach that taps into many fields, including ethics, history, sociology, evolutionary genetics, and public health is a necessary step for cultivating more thoughtful physicians who will be better prepared to care for patients of all racial and ethnic backgrounds.
DOI 10.1097/ACM.0000000000003496
PubMed ID 32379145
Back to Top