Seeing Patients: Unconscious Bias in Health Care

Seeing Patients: Unconscious Bias in Health Care

Seeing Patients: Unconscious Bias in Health Care

Seeing Patients: Unconscious Bias in Health Care

eBook

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Overview

If you’re going to have a heart attack, an organ transplant, or a joint replacement, here’s the key to getting the very best medical care: be a white, straight, middle-class male. This book by a pioneering black surgeon takes on one of the few critically important topics that haven’t figured in the heated debate over health care reform—the largely hidden yet massive injustice of bias in medical treatment.

Growing up in Jim Crow–era Tennessee and training and teaching in overwhelmingly white medical institutions, Gus White witnessed firsthand how prejudice works in the world of medicine. And while race relations have changed dramatically, old ways of thinking die hard. In Seeing Patients White draws upon his experience in startlingly different worlds to make sense of the unconscious bias that riddles medical treatment, and to explore what it means for health care in a diverse twenty-first-century America.

White and coauthor David Chanoff use extensive research and interviews with leading physicians to show how subconscious stereotyping influences doctor–patient interactions, diagnosis, and treatment. Their book brings together insights from the worlds of social psychology, neuroscience, and clinical practice to define the issues clearly and, most importantly, to outline a concrete approach to fixing this fundamental inequity in the delivery of health care.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674058774
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 05/15/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 461 KB

About the Author

Augustus A. White III, M.D., is Professor of Medical Education and Orthopaedic Surgery at Harvard Medical School and the first African American department chief at Harvard’s teaching hospitals.

Table of Contents

Contents Preface Introduction: My Fellow Humans 1. It Takes a Village: Memphis 2. Scrub Nurse 3. Becoming a Doctor: Stanford 4. Becoming a Surgeon: Yale 5. Combat Surgeon: Death and Our Common Humanity 6. Getting toward Equal: Sweden 7. A Man Ain’t Nothin’ but a Man 8. Orthopedic Chief: Harvard 9. Diagnosis and Treatment: The Subconscious at Work 10. Health-Care Disparities: Race 11. Health-Care Disparities: Women, Hispanics, Elderly, Gay 12. Culturally Competent Care Epilogue Some Practical Suggestions for Patients and Physicians National Standards on Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate Services Notes Acknowledgments Index
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