Title: Ethics and Healthcare for African Americans
1Ethics and Healthcare for African Americans
- John R. Stone, MD, PhD
- Center for Health Policy and Ethics
- Creighton University Medical Center
- JohnStone_at_creighton.edu
- http//chpe.creighton.edu/chpe/stone.htm
- June 1, 2007
2Purpose
- Summarize important themes and ethical issues in
healthcare of African Americans - Give some broad practical applications
3Driving Issue
- Significant inequalities in health and healthcare
that adversely affect African Americans
4Black Diversity
- History
- Beliefs
- National backgrounds
- Customs
Melissa Welch. Care of Blacks and African
Americans. In Cross-Cultural Medicine. edit. by
Judyann Bigby. American College of Physicians
2003, pp. 29-60.
5Special Emphasis
- Trust and trustworthiness
- Respect
6Dont Touch
- She You dont want to touch me.
- She was giving me change.
- She Black.
- Stone White.
- She 20
- Stone. 28, USPHS medical officer
- Year 1970 or 1971
- Place Galveston Texas.
7Demanding? Hostile?
- White patients
- Demanding
- Needs met
- Black patients
- Hostile
- Needs not met, or less well
8Key Background
- Pervasive inequalities, generally unjust
- Health
- Healthcare
- IOM 2003 (http//www.nap.edu/books/030908265X/html
/) - NHDR 2005 (http//www.ahrq.gov/qual/nhdr05/nhdr05.
pdf) - Life Expectancy 1983-2003 (Harper S, Lynch J,
Burris S, Smith GD. Trends in the Black-White
Life Expectancy Gap in the United States,
1983-2003. JAMA. 20072971224-1232.)
9Crucial Intersections-AA Healthcare
People
Principle
10B/W Life Expectancy Gap
Harper S, Lynch J, Burris S, Smith GD. Trends in
the Black-White Life Expectancy Gap in the United
States, 1983-2003. JAMA. 20072971224-1232. From
the United States Life Tables of the National
Center for Health Statistics.
11B/W Life Expectancy _at_ Birth
Harper S, Lynch J, Burris S, Smith GD. Trends in
the Black-White Life Expectancy Gap in the United
States, 1983-2003. JAMA. 20072971224-1232. From
the United States Life Tables of the National
Center for Health Statistics.
12Racial/EthnicHealthcare Inequalities
- Given extensive evidence of healthcare
inequalities by R/E. - Is your institution assessing care by R/E?
- Evidence constitutes an imperative for careful
assessment and remediation. - Should the ethics committee be involved? Why?
How? - What should individual professionals do?
13R/E HealthcareEthical Principles
- Respect (equal, substantial)
- Justice
- Care
- Community
Stone JR. Healthcare Inequality, Cross-Cultural
Training, and Bioethics Principles and
Applications, Accepted for publication in
Special Section of Cambridge Quarterly of
Healthcare Ethics Illuminating Culture, Health,
and Ethics Beyond Equality and Justice. 2008 17
(2), Spring. Stone JR, Parham, GP. An Ethical
Framework for Community Health Workers and
Related Institutions. Accepted for publication in
Family Community Health Journal. Spring/early
fall 2007. Issue 304.
14R/E Healthcare InequalitiesWhy Institutions May
Not Assess
- Beliefs R/E bias, stereotypes--none/trivial
- Fears negative publicity litigation
- Resources takes them
- Threatening talk about race and racism
- Strong responses take moral courage
Dula A and Stone JR. Wakeup Call Healthcare and
Racism. Hastings Center Report,
2002 32(4)48.
15Dont Touch
- She You dont want to touch me.
- She was giving me change.
- She Black.
- Stone White.
- She 20
- Stone. 28, USPHS medical officer
- Year 1970 or 1971
- Place Galveston Texas.
16Crucial Intersections
People
Principle
17African AmericansHealth, Healthcare, and Ethics
Social Determinants
HC Structures
Pt-Prof
Focus of Ethics Committees? Focus of Health
Professionals?
18Demanding? Hostile?
- White patients
- Demanding
- Needs met
- Black patients
- Hostile
- Needs not met, or less well
19Issues Cross-cultural and More
- Whiteness
- Openness to anger, hostility
- Sensitivity to being labeled racist
- Humility that could be racially biased
- Intending equal care ? equal care
- Equal care ? color-blind care
- Historical knowledge and sensitivity
20Information RelationshipsWhite/Black
- Focus groups patients with cardiac stress
testing - Perception of information provided equivalent.
(incomplete, vague, ambiguous, and unclear. - Blacks preference for building a relationship
with physicians (trust) before agreeing to an
invasive cardiac procedure, and just as
consistently complained that trust was lacking. - Whites tended to emphasize that they were
inadequately convinced of the need for
recommended procedures. - Tracie C. Collins, Jack A. Clark, Laura A.
Petersen, Nancy R. Kressin. Racial Differences in
How Patients Perceive Physician Communication
Regarding Cardiac Testing. Medical Care.
200240(1S) I-2734. -
21Trust and Healthcare of African Americans
- Trust and Trustworthiness
- Long and sordid history
- Rational Distrust
- Fallibility Assumption
- Trustworthiness primary
Gamble, V. N. (2006). Trust, Medical Care, and
Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Multicultural
Medicine and Health Disparities. D. Satcher and
R. J. Pamies. New York, McGraw-Hill 437-448.
22Sources of Distrust
- Perceptions that physician communication was
less supportive, less partnering, and less
informative accounted for black patients lower
trust in physicians. - Our findings also raise the question about
whether there was variation in actual physician
communication behaviors by race of patient,
whether patients interpreted the communication
behavior differently by race, or both. - Gordon HS. Street RL Jr. Sharf BF. et al.
Racial differences in trust and lung cancer
patients' perceptions of physician communication.
J Clin Oncol. 200624(6) 904-9.
23Preference or Trust?
- Mrs. P, AA early-stage endometrial cancer
- No evidence of metastasis.
- Vaginal bleeding stops after curettage.
- Gyn oncologist recommends hysterectomy. Says he
has performed hundreds of these operations in the
last several years and that the risks are very
low. - Mrs. P notices women in the waiting room look
very ill. - She does not return to the doctor or return
calls. - K Armstrong, C Hughes-Halbert, DA Asch. Patient
Preferences Can Be Misleading as Explanations for
Racial Disparities in Health Care. Arch Intern
Med. 2006166950-954.
24Trust/Trustworthiness
- Case African American person has a serious
health condition. Doctor informs that
interventions A, B, and C are reasonable, but
recommends A. Doctor gives briefly summarizes why
recommends A. Patient raises several complicated
questions. The doctor answers them. More
questions. Doctor you should just trust me.
25Distrust, History, Racial Experience
- Knowledge of how African Americans have been
treated and their continued experiences is a step
toward - Understanding rational distrust
- Empathizing with those who distrust
- Being open to and patient with distrust
- Personal transformation
- Building trustworthiness
- Building trust
26Distrust and Resource Costs
- Extended care at end-of-life
- Increased litigation
- DeVille, Kenneth Kopelman, Loretta M.
Diversity, Trust, and Patient Care Affirmative
Action 25 Years after Bakke. J Med Philos.
200328(4)489-516.
27Building Rational TrustClinical Interactions
- Respect
- Honesty
- Competency
- Transparency
- Humanistic caring
- Sustained patient-physician relationships
- Openness to variety
- Cross-cultural knowledge, sensitivity, humility,
and agency enhancement - Decision-sharing (cultural variation)
- Diverse workforce
- Insufficient empirical guidance
- K Armstrong, C Hughes-Halbert, DA Asch. Patient
Preferences Can Be Misleading as Explanations for
Racial Disparities in Health Care. Arch Intern
Med. 2006166950-954. - McKinstry B, Ashcroft RE, Car J. Interventions
for improving patients' trust in doctors and
groups of doctors. Cochrane Database Syst Rev.
20063 CD004134. -
28Building Rational Trust Institutions
- Trustworthiness Focus (Radical change?)
- Major Community Involvement Pervasive
- Develop comprehensive training programs
cross-cultural, respect, humility, power-sharing,
agency-enabling - Assess outcomes
- Diversify workforce all levels
- (See advice for clinical interactions)
See Gamble, V. N. (2006). Trust, Medical Care,
and Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Multicultural
Medicine and Health Disparities. D. Satcher and
R. J. Pamies. New York, McGraw-Hill 437-448.
29Forms of AddressSeparate Cases
- HC Professional Good morning Sadie.
- Ms. Sadie Robinson is 75 years old
- HC Professional to family member Lets get you a
chair. - HC Professional to family What do you people
think would be best for Mr. Taylor? - HC Professional avoids touching
30RespectEqual, Substantial, Particular
- Names
- Touch
- Recognition
- Regard
- Agency
- Passion and caring
- Sitting and listening
31Real Case
- Betty (40, healthcare worker)
- I went to this doctor for a pap smear. I had
an infectionShe said, How many sex partners to
do you have? I said Gulp and just looked at
herShe said, Oh, you dont know how many.I
felt like was a little piece of garbage. I was
juststereotyped There was a little black woman
whos out havin all of these men who comes in
here with an infection
Melissa Welch. Care of Blacks and African
Americans. In Cross-Cultural Medicine. edit. by
Judyann Bigby. American College of Physicians
2003, p 32.
32Preferences? Respect?
- Mrs. S, AA, 65, routine checkup, different
doctor. - Near conclusion told needs flu shot, nurse will
give - Mrs. S is unsure friends say flu shots make them
sick. - Doc leaves before Mrs. S can question.
- At checkout, Mrs. S declines the flu shot, marked
as refusing. - Did her refusal represent her preference?
- Blacks and Hispanics report worse communication
than Whites - Whites get more information
- K Armstrong, C Hughes-Halbert, DA Asch. Patient
Preferences Can Be Misleading as Explanations for
Racial Disparities in Health Care. Arch Intern
Med. 2006166950-954.
33Respect
- Quality attention
- Openness (heart, mind)
- Willingness to be vulnerable
- Deep/authentic curiosity
- Grows out of
- Mutuality
- Connection
- Engagement
Sarah Lawrence-Lightfoot. Respect An
Exploration. Cambridge, MA Perseus 2000, pp.
217, 224
34Who are you?Default Assumptions
- Are you just another privileged, ignorant,
prejudiced professional?...or not? - Do you really care about me?.......or not?
- Do you respect me?........or not?
Professional Institution
35Respect
36Healthcare InequalitiesCross-cultural education
training
- Widely advised
- Minimal outcome data
37Promoting Institutional Change
- Advocacy
- Professionals
- Communities
- Law
- Ethics Committees
38Prejudice Stereotypes Doctors
- Dont think they are prejudiced
- Dont believe stereotypes affect choices
- But unconscious prejudice and stereotypes can
influence choices. - Become mindful that have biases stereotypes
that may affect decisions - Be alert time pressure promotes reliance on
prejudice and stereotypes - Be mindful of negative responses
Smith WR, Busey-Jones J. et al. (2006). Case
Studies in Multicultural Medicine and Health
Disparities. Multicultural Medicine and Health
Disparities. D. Satcher and R. J. Pamies. New
York, McGraw-Hill 361-388.
39Crucial Intersections
People
Principle
40References Cited
- Melissa Welch. Care of Blacks and African
Americans. In Cross-Cultural Medicine. edit. by
Judyann Bigby. American College of Physicians
2003, pp. 29-60. - IOM 2003 (http//www.nap.edu/books/030908265X/html
/) - NHDR 2005 (http//www.ahrq.gov/qual/nhdr05/nhdr05.
pdf) - Life Expectancy 1983-2003 (Harper S, Lynch J,
Burris S, Smith GD. Trends in the Black-White
Life Expectancy Gap in the United States,
1983-2003. JAMA. 20072971224-1232.) - Harper S, Lynch J, Burris S, Smith GD. Trends in
the Black-White Life Expectancy Gap in the United
States, 1983-2003. JAMA. 20072971224-1232. From
the United States Life Tables of the National
Center for Health Statistics. - Stone JR. Healthcare Inequality, Cross-Cultural
Training, and Bioethics Principles and
Applications, Accepted for publication in
Special Section of Cambridge Quarterly of
Healthcare Ethics Illuminating Culture, Health,
and Ethics Beyond Equality and Justice. 2008 17
(2), Spring. - Stone JR, Parham, GP. An Ethical Framework for
Community Health Workers and Related
Institutions. Accepted for publication in Family
Community Health Journal. Spring/early fall
2007. Issue 304. - Dula A, Stone JR. Wakeup Call Healthcare and
Racism. Hastings Centr Report, 2002 32(4)48. - Tracie C. Collins, Jack A. Clark, Laura A.
Petersen, Nancy R. Kressin. Racial Differences in
How Patients Perceive Physician Communication
Regarding Cardiac Testing. Medical Care.
200240(1S) I-2734. - Gamble, V. N. (2006). Trust, Medical Care, and
Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Multicultural
Medicine and Health Disparities. D. Satcher and
R. J. Pamies. New York, McGraw-Hill 437-448. - Gordon HS. Street RL Jr. Sharf BF. et al. Racial
differences in trust and lung cancer patients'
perceptions of physician communication. J Clin
Oncol. 200624(6) 904-9. - K Armstrong, C Hughes-Halbert, DA Asch. Patient
Preferences Can Be Misleading as Explanations for
Racial Disparities in Health Care. Arch Intern
Med. 2006166950-954. - Sarah Lawrence-Lightfoot. Respect An
Exploration. Cambridge, MA Perseus 2000, pp.
217, 224. - Smith WR, Busey-Jones J. et al. (2006). Case
Studies in Multicultural Medicine and Health
Disparities. Multicultural Medicine and Health
Disparities. D. Satcher and R. J. Pamies. New
York, McGraw-Hill 361-388.