Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 3 | Page 7

From the President Wayne Tuckson, MD GLMS President | [email protected] WORDS AND ACTIONS Matter I n the physicians’ lounge of a local hospi- tal, a TV was turned to one of the histri- onic daytime talk shows on which guests are willing to discuss intimate topics for TV immortality. The sound was off, but the topic “I’m carrying the baby of my girlfriend’s boyfriend” was on the screen. As the writing dissolved, the guests, two young African-American women, were shown. At that moment, a colleague who was sitting next to me exclaimed with great vitriol that these two young ladies were “costing him money,” because “they were welfare cheats.” I was then, and remain today, impressed at how, by merely seeing these two young ladies on TV, he knew their character and status. Now, imagine that you were one of these ladies or someone who looks like them, and happened to be a patient in his office, what type of care do you think you would receive? Yes, doctors, we may be racist. Perhaps this may be too bold a statement for me to make, as clearly none of us knows what another person is thinking. I admittedly cannot see into the depths of another’s soul, nor can I accurately say what someone else is really thinking. However, I can say with some degree of certainty, that one’s actions and words do have impact. Racial bias and stereotyping in health care is neither new nor unique to this community. The Institute of Medicine’s re- port, “Unequal Treatment,” documented observed differences in medical care and postulated that this may be a consequence of racial stereotypes held by health care providers. As recently as three years ago, Dr. Ron- ald Wyatt, an African-American and Med- ical Director in the Division of Healthcare Improvement at The Joint Commission, while a patient in a Chicago hospital, was the recipient of what may be generously de- scribed as less-than-standard care because of his race. After his experience, Dr. Wyatt wrote “racial bias and discrimination in health care as well as outside of medicine contribute to poor health for African-Amer- ican patients and other racial and ethnic minorities.” He concluded, “A racist system of health kills people.” In spite of our limited progress, as a group, in leaving our biases at the door, I still see the glass as half full. As Dr. Lisa Coo- per states, “acknowledging that the problem exists is half the battle and though it is hard to change subconscious attitudes, behavior can be changed once we are made aware of them.” I ask that we should all think about the code words that we use and what we may be consciously or unconsciously saying. Let us think about what patients hear when we refer to people as welfare queens, thugs, criminals, vermin, illegal aliens, rednecks, hillbillies, and other “dog whistle” deroga- tory terms. I don’t know who is a racist, but I, like our patients, know racist words when I hear them and racist actions when I see them, and they affect us all. Yes, what we think and feel about a pa- tient in front of us does impact their health outcome. When that patient feels that we are interested in them, they are more likely to become better participants in their own health care. Patients who have positive in- teractions with their doctors are more likely to follow through with care, make follow-up appointments and better control their dis- eases. 3 These are the ones who get better and stay healthy, and at the end of the day, isn’t that what we want for all of our patients? So, yes doctor, let us watch the words that we say and how we say them, for we all know what they mean. We went into medicine because we want to help people, so let us remove one of the obstacles that we can control, one that interferes with our providing good quality care to all that come through our doors. Referenc es: 1 Unequal Treatment. IOM 2002 2 Williams DR, Wyatt R. JAMA. 2015 3 Cooper L. Amer J Pub Health. 2012 Dr. Tuckson is a practicing colon and rectal surgeon. AUGUST 2018 5