• J Pain Symptom Manage · Jun 2022

    Review

    Application of Critical Race Theory in Palliative Care Research: A Scoping Review.

    • Lawson Marcewicz, Susan K Kunihiro, Kimberly A Curseen, Khaliah Johnson, and Dio Kavalieratos.
    • Division of Palliative Medicine (L.M., S.K.K., K.A.C., D.K.), Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, School of Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Atlanta VA Health Care System (L.M.), Decatur, Georgia, USA. Electronic address: lmarcew@emory.edu.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2022 Jun 1; 63 (6): e667-e684.

    ContextStructural racism negatively impacts individuals and populations. In the medical literature, including that of palliative care, structural racism's influence on interracial differences in outcomes remains poorly examined. Examining the contribution of structural racism to outcomes is paramount to promoting equity.ObjectivesWe examined portrayals of race and racial differences in outcomes in the palliative care literature and created a framework using critical race theory (CRT) to aid in this examination.MethodsWe reviewed the CRT literature and iteratively developed a rubric to examine when and how differences between races are described. Research articles published in The Journal of Pain and Symptom Management presenting empiric data specifically including findings about racial differences were examined independently by three reviewers using the rubric.ResultsFifty-seven articles met inclusion criteria. Articles that specifically described racial differences were common in the topic areas of quality (75% of articles), hospice (53%), palliative care services (40%) and spirituality/religion (40%). The top three reasons posited for racial differences were patient preference (26%), physician bias (23%), and cultural barriers (21%). Using the CRT rubric we found that 65% of articles posited that a racial difference was something that needed to be rectified, while articles rarely provided narrative (5%) or other data on perspectives of people of color (11%) to explain assumptions about differences.ConclusionPalliative care research frequently highlights racial differences in outcomes. Articles that examine racial differences often assume that differences need to be fixed but posit reasons for differences without the narratives of those most affected by them.Published by Elsevier Inc.

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