Section outline

  • Lecture:  Health care disparities

    Influential papers establishing health care disparities as a factor contributing to health disparities, as well as studies using novel methodologies to investigate and address health care disparities, including standardized patients and between and within hospital comparisons.

    Faculty:  Christine Dehlendorf

    Location:  
    MIssion Hall 1406

    • Session Audio/Video Recording (Access restricted to registered students):

    • Watch URL
      Not available unless: You belong to a group in Registered Students Only
    • Required Reading:

    • Van ryn Coronaryartery File
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    • Li Y.JAMA.2011.Lect.2pdf File
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    • health equity curriculum File
      Not available unless: Your ID number contains 02
    • Anand healthcaredisparities File
      Not available unless: Your ID number contains 02
    • Optional Reading:

    • Bias Review 2017 File
      Not available unless: Your ID number contains 02
    • neff File
      Not available unless: Your ID number contains 02
    • Dehlendorf File
      Not available unless: Your ID number contains 02
    • dovidio File
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    • Resources:


    • Assignment:

      Please consider these questions below when reading each article. If you are unable to attend the class session, please post answers to these questions to the forum by midnight on May 8th.

      If you are interested in more detail about the scope and causes of implicit bias among providers, you can review some of the optional reading. The Bias_Review provides an overall overview of the literature on implicit bias, including the fact that health care providers have consistently been found to have the same level of bias as members of the general population. The Dovidio article goes into more depth on the underlying nature of bias.


      Van ryn:

      1.       What insight do the findings of this study provide about the origin of health care disparities?

      2.       How can the findings of this study be used to inform interventions designed to minimize health care disparities?

      3.       What hypothesis do you have for why there may have been differences by race in recommendations for men, but not women?

       

      Li:

      1.       Put into your own words what this study found, and what these results suggest as potential causes for health disparities.

      2.       What interventions would be warranted given these findings?

       

      Health Equity Curriculum:

      1.       How does the implicit association test isolate implicit bias?

      2.       What other types of interventions could have an effect on provider bias?

       

      Anand:

      1.       How is the intervention described in this study designed to affect health care disparities?

      2.       While this is designed to be a multi-level intervention, there is one source of health care disparities that this approach does address. What is it? (Think about the Li study). What additional interventions are necessary to address this cause?