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  • Summary

    Race and ethnic inequalities in health are widely recognised, with much work needed to improve care, diagnosis and treatment, and outcomes for patients. Racism is also evident within healthcare organisations and the impact on staff can be devastating. 

    In this blog, we’ve collated a wide range of resources, including the latest research, the barriers patients face, improvement initiatives, health inequalities in maternity, and staff discrimination to evidence some of the key patient safety issues and the need for greater investment in this area.

    Content

    Barriers to diagnosis and treatment

    1 Perceived barriers to accessing mental health services among black and minority ethnic communities: a qualitative study

    In most developed countries, substantial disparities exist in access to mental health services for black and minority ethnic populations. This study sought to determine perceived barriers to accessing mental health services among people from these backgrounds to inform the development of effective and culturally acceptable services to improve equity in healthcare.

    2 ‘Mistreatment’ due to the colour of your skin

    A blog highlighting the barriers in healthcare faced by patients due to the colour of their skin. Impacting factors can include explicit racial bias, which includes discrimination and prejudice; implicit racial bias; missing data; lack of trust; and reduced access. These can lead to misdiagnoses and delays in treatment, which can ultimately cause harm and preventable death.

    3 95% of healthcare professionals do not feel confident diagnosing dermatology conditions across skin tones

    This blog by Pastest, a provider of medical exam preparation resources, explores how different organisations are developing transformative initiatives to diversify clinical practice. It highlights the results of a global survey that reveals a critical gap in dermatological diagnosis across skin tones and explores the need for a multifaceted approach to anti-racist medicine.

    4 Equity in medical devices: independent review

    A core responsibility of the NHS is to maintain the highest standards of safety and effectiveness of medical devices available for all patients in its care. Evidence has emerged, however, about the potential for racial and ethnic bias in the design and use of some medical devices commonly used in the NHS, and that some ethnic groups may receive sub-optimal treatment as a result. In response to these concerns, the UK Government commissioned this independent review on equity in medical devices. In its final report, the Review sets out the need for immediate action to tackle the impact of ethnic biases in the use of medical devices.

    5 Skin assessment in patients with dark skin tone

    This article in the American Journal of Nursing provides basic information about the assessment of dark skin tone and calls for action in academia and professional practice to ensure the performance of effective skin assessments in all patients.

    6 “We’re not taken seriously”: Describing the experiences of perceived discrimination in medical settings for Black women

    Cervical cancer disparities persist for Black women despite targeted efforts. Reasons for this vary; one potential factor affecting screening and prevention is perceived discrimination in medical settings. 

    Inequalities in maternity

    1 For black women in the UK, a fear of pregnancy is far from irrational

    In this blog for Refinery 29, journalist L'Oréal Blackett discusses the additional risk and associated worries faced by black pregnant women in the UK. With black women four times more likely to die in childbirth than white women, and 40% more likely to suffer a miscarriage, she examines what action the government is taking to improve outcomes for black women and their babies. She speaks to a number of campaigners who highlight the importance of including black women at every stage of research and policy to tackle race-based health inequalities.

    2 Five X More campaign: Improving maternal mortality rates and health outcomes for black women

    In this interview, Patient Safety Learning talks to Tinuke, co-founder of the Five X More campaign and founder of the mothers group, Mums and Tea. Tinuke started the Five X More campaign as a response to the MBRRACE 2018 report which highlighted that black women in the UK are five times more likely to die in pregnancy and childbirth in comparison to a white woman.

    3 Review of neonatal assessment and practice in Black, Asian and minority ethnic newborns: Exploring the Apgar score, the detection of cyanosis, and jaundice

    The results of a commissioned review undertaken by Sheffield Hallam University highlights a number of ‘reliability concerns’ around three current neonatal assessments and perinatal practices – the Apgar score and the detection of cyanosis and jaundice. It calls for immediate update of maternity guidelines that refer to assessments by skin colour and the increased use of screening tool devices, including oximeters and bilirubinometers. Urgent research is also needed which focuses on enhancing the reliability of these tools especially for darker skinned babies.

    4 Addressing critical gaps in Black maternal mental healthcare: a new partnership project is launched

    Sandra Igwe is the Founder and CEO of The Motherhood Group. In this interview Sandra tells us about a new partnership project, bringing together The Motherhood GroupCentre for Mental Health, and the Maternal Mental Health Alliance to address critical gaps in Black maternal mental healthcare.

    Staff discrimination

    1 NHS Confederation - Shattered hopes: black and minority ethnic leaders’ experiences of breaking the glass ceiling in the NHS

    This report by NHS Confederation looks at the lived experience of senior black and minority ethnic leaders in the NHS. The report highlights that more than half of those surveyed considered leaving the health service in the last three years because of their experience of racist treatment while performing their role as an NHS leader. Colleagues, leaders and managers seemed to be a particular source of racist treatment, more so than members of the public. This suggests that more focused efforts are required at every level to reduce the incidence of racist behaviour and to improve awareness among all staff of the impact of this type of discrimination.

    2 Resource for nursing and midwifery professionals to combat racial discrimination against minority ethnic nurses, midwives and nursing associates

    Racism is unacceptable and it has no place in health and care. But we know that it exists and that the impact on staff can be devastating. All registered professionals have responsibility under the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) Code to challenge discriminatory behaviour, creating an environment where people are treated as individuals and with dignity and respect. This resource is designed to support nurses, midwives and nursing associates, providing advice on the action you can take if you witness or experience racism. It also supports those in leadership roles to be inclusive leaders.

    3 Too hot to handle? Why concerns about racism are not heard... or acted on

    This report aims to understand the NHS response to racism, what trusts and healthcare organisations do about it and how effective they are at addressing it. It brings together key learning from a number of significant tribunal cases and responses from 1,327 people to a survey about their experiences of raising allegations of racism within their organisations.

    4 Closing the gap: A guide to addressing racial discrimination in disciplinaries

    A guide from NHS Providers to help health service trusts tackle racial discrimination in disciplinary procedures and promote inclusivity.

    5 Nursing narratives: Racism and the pandemic

    This report describes the findings of a study that collected stories of the working lives of Black and Brown healthcare staff during the Covid-19 pandemic. The study asked them to reflect on their experiences and highlight the changes they would like to see. It highlights a number of issues around victimisation, access to PPE, speaking up and risk assessments. 

    6 Racism which impacts healthcare staff endangers patient care

    As well as a moral issue, tackling racism affecting NHS staff is a crucial part of improving patient safety and care, says MDX Research Fellow Roger Kline. In this blog, Roger looks at the risks of racism on patient safety.

    Improvement initiatives

    1 How Lambeth is closing the health inequality gap for Black and minority ethnic patients with high blood pressure

    Black and minority ethnic patients with high blood pressure have benefited from a project which was run by two Lambeth GP practices. The project aimed to reduce the very significant difference in blood pressure control (hypertension) between Black and minority ethnic patients and white patients. The year-long project resulted in the two practices achieving some of the best outcomes ever seen in South East London for overall hypertension control, with a 12% inequality gap for blood pressure control between black and white patients completely eradicated. In addition, over 300 patients from the local community were newly diagnosed with hypertension.

    2 Patient and Carer Race Equality Framework - community

    This video provides an introduction to Sheffield Health and Social Care NHS Foundation Trust's (SHSCFT's) Patient and Carer Race Equality Framework (PCREF). The PCREF aims to help the Trust's staff and communities understand how to have sensitive conversations with patients and carers and to get better information from them. This will mean the Trust is more culturally aware and able to offer culturally appropriate care by understanding the barriers ethnic minority communities face in getting healthcare services for diagnosis and treatment.

    4 Excellence through equality: Anti-racism as a quality improvement tool

    This report from the BME Leadership Network comprises examples of anti-racist initiatives from BME Leadership Network members, to help advance equality within the workforce and for service users.

    5 Be the Change: How to tackle racial inequalities in health and care charities

    A few years ago, National Voices created an inclusion action plan to try to narrow the gaps in racial inequalities by driving improvements in their recruitment practices, organisational culture, influencing activities and work with people with lived experience.  A key part of that plan was convening their members to learn from each other, so they organised a series of four members-only roundtables for focused, pragmatic and open discussion. This report, highlights the main learnings in each of the areas, and draws out general advice from all these conversations. They hope it will give colleagues in the health and voluntary sectors ideas for what they could do, alongside practical tools to take action.  

    6 Mind the Gap: A handbook of clinical signs in Black and Brown skin

    Mind the Gap is a Handbook to raise awareness of how symptoms and signs can present differently on darker skin as well as highlighting the different language that needs to be used in descriptors. The aim of this booklet is to educate students and essential allied health care professionals on the importance of recognising that certain clinical signs do not present the same on darker skin.

    7 The Health Foundation: Bringing an anti-racism approach to quality improvement in maternity care

    Black Maternity Matters is a collaboration supporting perinatal staff to reduce the inequitable maternity outcomes faced by Black mothers and their babies. Through a ground-breaking programme of training, including anti-racist education, peer support, and quality improvement, it supports maternity systems to provide safer, equitable care. In a recent episode of the Leading Improvement in Health and Care podcast, Penny Pereira, Q Managing Director, spoke to three improvement leaders from the Black Maternity Matters programme.

    Structural racism

    1 Institute of Health Equity: Structural racism, ethnicity and health inequalities in London

    Racism in London is widespread and persistent causing damage to individuals, communities and society as a whole. Its impacts are experienced in different ways and to varying levels of intensity related to individual experiences, socioeconomic position and other dimensions of exclusion such as disability, age and gender. The intersections with other dimensions of exclusion can amplify the effects of racism.  The focus of this review is on the effects of racism on health and its contribution to avoidable inequalities in health between ethnic groups – a particularly unacceptable form of health inequity. It is urgent that society tackle the damage to health and wellbeing as a result of racism.  

    2 Structural racism as a contributor to lung cancer incidence and mortality rates among Black populations in the United States

    Although racial disparities in lung cancer incidence and mortality have diminished in recent years, lung cancer remains the second most diagnosed cancer among US Black populations. Many factors contributing to disparities in lung cancer are rooted in structural racism. To quantify this relationship, Robinson-Oghogho et al. examined associations between a multidimensional measure of county-level structural racism and county lung cancer incidence and mortality rates among Black populations, while accounting for county levels of environmental quality.

    Interrogating and uprooting systemic racism in the emergency department

    Systemic racism refers to systems in which norms and practice patterns reinforce racial and ethnic inequalities even in the absence of individual intentions to do so. Uncovering subtle, overt and pervasive instances of racism that influence and change the trajectory of patient care is important. Emergency departments (EDs) offer a distinct environment where equity is not just a concept, but a fundamental practice that should be woven through all interactions between the patient, healthcare professionals and the system. For this reason, EDs are poised to lead health equity advocacy in the delivery of high-quality care. This JAMA Health Forum viewpoint article looks at evidence relating to ED systems’ vulnerability to systemic racism and maps a path forward to dismantle racism in the ED.

    Women from ethnic minorities face endemic structural racism when seeking and accessing healthcare

    Women from ethnic minorities are voicing their concerns that they face endemic structural racism when seeking and accessing healthcare, and they feel that their symptoms and signs are more often dismissed. It is vital that patients are listened to when they say that they feel this is also due to structural racism in healthcare.

    5 Structural racism — A 60-year-old Black woman with breast cancer

    This study uses the case study of a 60-year-old Black woman with breast cancer as an example of structural racism and propose three critical strategies for addressing structural racism in health care. These strategies hinge on shifting the focus of work on racial differences in health outcomes from biologic or behavioural problems to the design of health care organisations and other social institutions.

    Research

    1 Language-based exclusion associations with racial and ethnic disparities in thyroid cancer clinical trials

    Racial and ethnic disparities in thyroid cancer care may be reduced by improving enrolment of more diverse patient populations in clinical trials. This study in the journal Surgery looked at trial eligibility criteria and enrolment to assess barriers to equitable representation.

    2 Differences in care team response to patient portal messages by patient race and ethnicity

    The use of patient portals to send messages to healthcare teams is increasing. This JAMA Network Open cross-sectional study of nearly 40,000 US patients aimed to find out whether there are differences in how care teams respond to messages from Asian, Black and Hispanic patients compared with similar White patients. The authors found that messages asking for medical advice sent by patients who belong to minoritised racial and ethnic groups were less likely to receive a response from doctors and more likely to receive a response from registered nurses. This suggests these patients receive lower prioritisation during triaging. The differences observed were similar among Asian, Black and Hispanic patients.

    3 Racial implicit bias and communication among physicians in a simulated environment

    This JAMA Network Open study aimed to explore whether standardised patients in a simulated environment can be effectively used to explore racial implicit bias and communication skills among doctors. For this cross-sectional study, 60 doctors were placed in an environment calibrated with cognitive stressors common to clinical environments. The results reflected expected communication patterns based on prior research (performed in actual clinical environments) on racial implicit bias and physician communication. The authors believe that this simulation and the process of its development can inform interventions that provide opportunities for skills development and assessment of skills in addressing racial implicit bias.

    5 Racial differences in shared decision-making about critical illness

    This US study looked at how critical care doctors approach shared decision-making with Black compared with White caregivers of critically ill patients. The authors found that racial disparities exist in critical care clinicians' approaches to shared decision-making and suggest potential areas for future interventions aimed at promoting equity.

    6 Impact of healthcare algorithms on racial and ethnic disparities in health and healthcare

    This systematic review conducted for the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) aimed to examine the evidence on whether and how healthcare algorithms exacerbate, perpetuate or reduce racial and ethnic disparities in access to healthcare, quality of care and health outcomes. The results showed that algorithms potentially perpetuate, exacerbate and sometimes reduce racial and ethnic disparities. Disparities were reduced when race and ethnicity were incorporated into an algorithm to intentionally tackle known racial and ethnic disparities in resource allocation (for example, kidney transplant allocation) or disparities in care (for example, prostate cancer screening that historically led to Black men receiving more low-yield biopsies).

    7 Characteristics of publicly available skin cancer image datasets: a systematic review

    Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly being used in medicine to help with the diagnosis of diseases such as skin cancer. To be able to assist with this, AI needs to be ‘trained’ by looking at data and images from a large number of patients where the diagnosis has already been established, so an AI programme depends heavily upon the information it is trained on. This review, published in The Lancet Digital Health, looked at all freely accessible sets of data on skin lesions around the world.

    These are just a selection of the resources we have on the hub, read more in the health inequalities section of the hub.

    Share your insights

    We'd like to hear from patients about your experiences and how it has impacted your care.

    Or perhaps you are clinician or researcher with a perspective to share on health inequalities?

    Please leave a comments below (sign up here first for free), or contact us directly at [email protected].

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    Thanks for the useful article highlighting an important issue. One topic briefly acknowledged towards the end of the article is that the collection of ethnicity data is so poor, both in the NHS and private sector. Whilst there should never be discrimination about treatment based on ethnicity, it would be immensely helpful to understand how conditions might affect different ethnic groups differently, plus whether there is any variation in treatment outcomes by ethnic groups. Without comprehensive collection, we just don't know and this is likely to cause disadvantage.

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