Volume 68, Issue 3 | Page 32

DOCTORS' LOUNGE (continued from page 29) “light skinned” Brown immigrant to the US, I now benefit from the sacrifices that Black people made and continue to make. Like many future health care practitioners, I feel we all must learn about prominent instances of medical racism: in reality, they are all too common. The few examples we are taught in medical school include the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis, and the performance of numerous surgeries without anesthesia on then enslaved women by the “father of modern Gynecology,” James Sims, MD. Institutional racism within medicine is as old as medicine itself. In 2020, inequities and gaps in our medical education persists in other forms. White normativity in medical education ranges from incorrect Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR) estimates factoring race on no biological basis, 1 to dermatological manifestations of critical cases of Lyme disease that went unrecognized in darker-skinned people, delaying diagnosis until later in the course of the disease. Black children are more likely to be hospitalized for Kawasaki Disease than their white counterparts due to late recognition of the life-threatening condition and rash required for its diagnosis. 2 New mothers of dark-skinned neonates are told that life-threatening conditions such as meningitis presents with an “erythematous rash.” Dermatologic conditions that are generally described as “erythematous” such as erythema multiforme typically present differently in dark skin, and many clinicians might not be familiar with how common conditions, such as eczema or those more serious, look in patients with more melanin. With our ever-diversifying population, medical education reform is paramount. Despite that history, maternal mortality rate continues to be three times higher in Black mothers. 3 Depression is underdiagnosed and is more devastating with a poor prognosis in Black patients, 4 and Schizophrenia continues to be over diagnosed in Black patients. People of color have a higher burden of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hypertension and mental health concerns, and are half as likely to receive pain medication than their white counterparts. Perhaps the most current driver of health care disparities is the COVID-19 pandemic where racial and ethnic minority patients are the most likely to be infected and to die. 5 The Indian Health Service is notoriously underfunded, and Native Americans have suffered devastating consequences from the pandemic. Other contributors to this impact are Black and Brown men’s fear of police profiling for wearing a mask, the compounding factors of socioeconomic class and living in smaller spaces, the loss of medical care due to lack of transportation, finances or familial responsibilities and distrust of the medical system: these all amplify the inequities in health. One tangible way to address these disparities is by incorporating more images of disease presentation in dark skin so our eyes become better trained to recognize them as clinicians. As more clinicians realized the dire need for this educational reform, a few steps in the right direction have begun. A few dermatologists are doing prominent work regarding the representation of dark skin in medical education. Dr. Nkanyezi Ferguson started Iowa’s first Ethnic Skin Care Clinic, and Drs. A. Paul Kelly and Susan Taylor authored a book titled Dermatology for Skin of Color.” Efforts to address these disparities require the participation of many institutions to improve patient-provider interactions and health care outcomes. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends implementing standardized protocols in quality improvement initiatives, as well as identifying and addressing implicit bias in medicine. Although some institutions recently transitioned to the calculation of estimated GFR that is not adjusted by race, such change should be used as a driving point for programs nationally. Changes of this caliber cannot be merely isolated instances in a vacuum, but need to be part of broader implementation of racially competent education at all medical institutions. As medical providers interested in providing the best care for our patients, this approach ensures that these changes are ingrained in our practice of medicine. Diversifying student trainees and faculty within medicine is critical to ensure the representation of our often-overlooked communities. Minority patients need providers who look like them, and whom they perceive as culturally competent and compassionate. Curricula reform, plus adding health equity and social justice questions to standardized medical exams, are essential steps to emphasize the negative consequences of implicit bias and racism on patients. We should be aware of our biases, examine them and check ourselves for that awareness always, in the care of each patient. References 1 Lesley A Inker, Tariq Shafi, Aghogho Okparavero , et al. Effects of Race and Sex on Measured GFR: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis. American journal of Kidney Diseases 2016 Aug;68(5):743-751. 2 Walid M Abuhammour , Rashed A Hasan, Ahmed Eljamal, Basim Asmar. Kawasaki Disease Hospitalizations in a Predominantly African-American Population. Clinical Pediatrics 2005 Oct;44(8):721-5. 3 Emily E. Petersen; Nicole L. Davis; David Goodman, et al. Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Pregnancy-Related Deaths — United States, 2007–2016. Center for Disease Control and Prevention Morbidity Mortality Weekly Report 2019;68:762–765. 4 Zohaib Sohail, Rahn Kennedy Bailey, William D. Richie. Misconceptions of Depression in African Americans. Front Psychiatry 2014 Jun; 65 (5). 5 COVID-19 in Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups. June 25, 2020 (https://www. cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/need-extra-precautions/racial-ethnic-minorities.html) Yomna Amer is a fourth-year medical student at the University of Louisville School of Medicine. 30 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE