Bias may often be found in human reasoning, judgment, and
behavior. It may be a tendency or predisposition on the part of a person or
entity to make prejudgments about other people or entities or to have
preconceived opinions about them or to act on the basis of prejudgments and preconceived
opinions about them.
It may cause a person to invariably view a particular
group of people in an approving or
disapproving manner, based on that person’s preconceived opinions
about that particular group of people. It may thus skew that person's viewpoint regarding that particular group of people, due to the preconceived nature of his/her attitudes and opinions.
Bias may be sporadic or persistent in its effect, and transient or long-standing in its duration. It may be superficial or deep-seated, overt or covert, recognized or unrecognized.
Bias in medicine may take the form of racial, ethnic,
gender, socioeconomic, geographic, and cultural biases against particular
groups of medical patients.
Examples of biases against particular groups of patients include
biases against poor, homeless, and uninsured patients, and biases against
black, Hispanic, and LGBT patients. These kinds of bias are obviously unfair
and unjust, and it therefore becomes obvious that any kind of bias against
patients on the basis of such factors as race, ethnicity, gender, age,
sexual orientation, religion, nationality, or socioeconomic status is unfair and unjust.
Targets of unfair and unjust biases may also include particular groups of medical school and nursing school applicants, particular groups of medical students and nursing students, and particular groups of healthcare professionals.
Bias in medicine may also take the form of cognitive biases on
the part of medical providers with regard to the manner in which they undertake
medical diagnosis and treatment.
It may also take the form of intergroup biases on the part
of healthcare professionals with regard to the way in which they perceive one
another’s professional competence (for example, with regard to the way in which
physicians, nurses, physician assistants, and pharmacists view one another’s
competence, and with regard to the way in which surgeons, pediatricians,
internists, gynecologists, and psychiatrists view one another’s competence).
It may also take the form of biases on the part of society
with regard to the way in which administrative and legislative decisions are
made about healthcare resource allocation, healthcare funding, and healthcare
system planning.
Bias may occur on the part of medical providers, educators,
administrators, researchers, accreditation and licensing boards, insurance
providers, and entire health systems.
Biases against particular groups of patients may affect
the degree of dignity and respect with which they are treated, the degree of
autonomy in decision-making that they are allowed, the degree of informed consent
that they are permitted in their medical decision-making, and the adequacy of
the counseling that they receive from their medical providers about their
diagnoses, evaluation, and treatment.
Biases against particular groups of medical patients may also
affect the range of possible diagnoses for their conditions that are considered
and confirmed or ruled out, the range of diagnostic services that are offered,
the range of treatment options that are discussed and considered, and the
timeliness, appropriateness, continuity, and quality of care that is provided.
Examples of biases against particular groups of patients
include the assignment of particular patients to particular hospital beds or
wards (those considered least desirable) on the basis of the patients’ race,
ethnicity, or financial status. Other examples include the assignment of
patients to inexperienced medical providers (medical students or residents) on
the basis of the patients’ race, ethnicity, or financial status. Other examples
include the lack of inclusion of women and minorities as participants in
scientific research that might potentially have favorable implications for
their health status, and the lack of availability of medical services for patients
belonging to underserved populations (inequitable access to medical care).
Examples of biases benefiting particular groups of patients
include the availability of luxurious VIP hospital wards for affluent patients,
the availability of boutique medical practices for affluent patients, the
availability of other individualized care options for affluent patients, and
various other kinds of preferential treatment affecting access to medical providers
and range of medical services offered.
Examples of biases against women and minorities in medicine include the underrepresentation of women and minorities among medical students, among medical student honor society members, among medical school faculty, and among medical school deans, medical
department heads, hospital administrators, hospital board trustee members, medical
quality assurance administrators, and medical licensing board members.
- biases with regard to admission of minority applicants to medical schools and medical residency programs
- biases with regard to evaluation of performance of women and minority medical students, residents, and staff
- biases impacting access to academic and professional mentoring for women and minorities
- biases impacting assignment of work schedules to women and minorities (with rigid, inflexible work schedules assigned to women who have family as well as professional responsibilities, and with undesirable work schedules consisting of weekend and night shifts inequitably assigned to minorities)
- biases impacting the level of salary and promotion offered to women as compared to men, and to minorities as compared to non-minorities
- biases with regard to opportunities for professional advancement
- biases with regard to recognition of academic and professional excellence.
The impression that bias may occur in many ways in the field of medicine does not warrant the conclusion that the medical profession as a whole is biased against particular groups of people, however. Many (perhaps most?) physicians are unbiased in their approach to caring for and meeting the needs of patients. Many (perhaps most?) physicians are also very careful to avoid developing cognitive, social, or professional biases in their roles as care providers, educators, researchers, and administrators. However, the potential for bias to occur throughout the field of medicine reveals that it is a problem that physicians must be very mindful of and on guard against if it is to be avoided, identified, remediated, and corrected.
Thank you very much for this great post.
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