Words Matter: Stylistic Writing Strategies for Racial Health Equity in Academic Medicine

被引:5
|
作者
Black, Carmen [1 ]
Pondugula, Nishita [1 ]
Spearman-McCarthy, E. Vanessa [2 ]
机构
[1] Yale Sch Med, Yale Dept Psychiat, 34 Pk St, New Haven, CT 06519 USA
[2] Augusta Univ, Med Coll Georgia, 1120 15th St, Augusta, GA 30912 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1007/s40615-022-01424-1
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Many racialized health inequities in the USA have been known for decades. However, academic medicine, individual clinicians, and larger healthcare systems have not yet supported action towards sufficient and meaningful solutions, as evidenced by the persistence of racialized health inequities over time. Recently, academic medicine is increasing efforts to unequivocally identify systemic racism as a public health crisis because it drives health inequity to racially minoritized groups. A health equity emphasis in clinical education, practice, and research differs from a disparities approach because it seeks to dismantle the systems of racism that create inequitable health outcomes in the first place. Therefore, medical education, practice, and research are slowly transitioning from a lens of health disparities to one of health equity. In order to support this transition, authors and journals must restructure the depiction of health inequities caused by racism. Based upon the principles of the social medicine pioneer, Dr. Rudolph Virchow, the knowledge conveyed by scientific and medical academic writing must clearly name the drivers of social disease - which is generalized to the American landscape of racialized health inequity for the purposes of this manuscript - in order to inform action capable of stopping socially mediated health inequity. Yet, the language and construction of health disparities literature perpetuates colorblind and aversive racism by stylistically omitting the driver of inequity quite frequently, which renders such knowledge unable to support action. In this article, three academicians across the spectrum of social justice education identify and classify common writing styles of health disparities research in order to demonstrate how a writing style of racial health equity better supports true progress towards equity.
引用
收藏
页码:2071 / 2076
页数:6
相关论文
共 24 条
  • [21] Priority strategies to improve gender equity in Canadian emergency medicine: proceedings from the CAEP 2021 Academic Symposium on leadership
    McIlveen-Brown, Emma
    Morris, Judy
    Lim, Rodrick
    Johnson, Kirsten
    Byrne, Alyson
    Bischoff, Taylor
    Hurley, Katrina
    Mann, Miriam
    Menchetti, Isabella
    Pardhan, Alim
    Pham, Chau
    Sheppard, Gillian
    Zia, Ayesha
    Chan, Teresa M.
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2022, 24 (02) : 151 - 160
  • [22] DEVELOPING A POLICY BRIEF ON CHILD MENTAL HEALTH DISPARITIES TO PROMOTE STRATEGIES FOR ADVANCING EQUITY AMONG RACIAL/ETHNIC MINORITY YOUTH
    Butler, Ashley M.
    Rodgers, Caryn R. R.
    [J]. ETHNICITY & DISEASE, 2019, 29 : 421 - 426
  • [23] "URM Candidates Are Encouraged to Apply": A National Study to Identify Effective Strategies to Enhance Racial and Ethnic Faculty Diversity in Academic Departments of Medicine
    Peek, Monica E.
    Kim, Karen E.
    Johnson, Julie K.
    Vela, Monica B.
    [J]. ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2013, 88 (03) : 405 - 412
  • [24] The Fourth Annual Academic International Medicine Congress (AIM 2019) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, July 26-28, 2019: Advancing Global Leadership to Promote Health Equity
    Garg, Sona M.
    Garg, Manish
    Paladino, Lorenzo
    Jeanmonod, Donald
    Jeanmonod, Rebecca
    McDonald, Marian P.
    Nanda, Sudip
    Opara, Ijeoma
    Miller, Andrew
    Papadimos, Thomas J.
    Peck, Gregory
    Sifri, Ziad C.
    Stawicki, Stanislaw P.
    Swaroop, Mamta
    Thakker, Krima
    Yaffe, Anna
    Galwankar, Sagar C.
    Bloem, Christina
    Arquilla, Bonnie
    Anderson, Harry L., III
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2019, 5 (03) : 198 - 239