• Academic pediatrics · Mar 2017

    Comparative Study

    Comparison of Physician Implicit Racial Bias Toward Adults Versus Children.

    • Tiffani J Johnson, Daniel G Winger, Robert W Hickey, Galen E Switzer, Elizabeth Miller, Margaret B Nguyen, Richard A Saladino, and Leslie R M Hausmann.
    • Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. Electronic address: johnsont6@email.chop.edu.
    • Acad Pediatr. 2017 Mar 1; 17 (2): 120-126.

    Background And ObjectivesThe general population and most physicians have implicit racial bias against black adults. Pediatricians also have implicit bias against black adults, albeit less than other specialties. There is no published research on the implicit racial attitudes of pediatricians or other physicians toward children. Our objectives were to compare implicit racial bias toward adults versus children among resident physicians working in a pediatric emergency department, and to assess whether bias varied by specialty (pediatrics, emergency medicine, or other), gender, race, age, and year of training.MethodsWe measured implicit racial bias of residents before a pediatric emergency department shift using the Adult and Child Race Implicit Association Tests (IATs). Generalized linear models compared Adult and Child IAT scores and determined the association of participant demographics with Adult and Child IAT scores.ResultsAmong 91 residents, we found moderate pro-white/anti-black bias on both the Adult (mean = 0.49, standard deviation = 0.34) and Child Race IAT (mean = 0.55, standard deviation = 0.37). There was no significant difference between Adult and Child Race IAT scores (difference = 0.06, P = .15). Implicit bias was not associated with resident demographic characteristics, including specialty.ConclusionsThis is the first study demonstrating that resident physicians have implicit racial bias against black children, similar to levels of bias against black adults. Bias in our study did not vary by resident demographic characteristics, including specialty, suggesting that pediatric residents are as susceptible as other physicians to implicit bias. Future studies are needed to explore how physicians' implicit attitudes toward parents and children may impact inequities in pediatric health care.Copyright © 2016 Academic Pediatric Association. All rights reserved.

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