From RAND Policy Currents <[email protected]>
Subject The Impact of Racism on Patient Safety
Date October 27, 2022 6:01 PM
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** RAND research and commentary on the issues that matter most
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Oct 27, 2022


The Impact of Racism on Patient Safety

The medical field uses the term "patient safety events" to refer to a wide range of harms, from bad drug interactions to surgical site infections to missed diagnoses. A recent RAND study found that minoritized patients are at especially high risk of such events.

The researchers found no shortage of explanations for the disparity. For example, minoritized communities often lack access to top-quality hospitals. They're also less likely to have health insurance. But the findings also suggest that racism is a root cause. In fact, the doctors, nurses, and other professionals interviewed for the study were almost unanimous in describing racism as a factor in some or all patient safety events.

Addressing this problem will require hospitals and other health care providers to improve how they track patient safety and demographics. But stakeholders may need to first acknowledge the role that racism plays in patient safety events.

"We need to start thinking differently," said RAND's Lucy Schulson, lead author of the study and a practicing internist at Boston Medical Center. "That starts by naming the problem for what it is."

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