Orlando Sentinel

Pediatrici­ans’ group moves to end ‘race-based’ guidance

- By Lindsey Tanner

For years, pediatrici­ans have followed flawed guidelines linking race to risks for urinary infections and newborn jaundice.

In a new policy announced Monday, the American Academy of Pediatrics said it is putting all its guidance under the microscope to eliminate “race-based” medicine and resulting health disparitie­s.

A re-examinatio­n of AAP treatment recommenda­tions that began before George Floyd’s 2020 death and intensifie­d after it has doctors concerned that Black youngsters have been undertreat­ed and overlooked, said Dr. Joseph Wright, lead author of the new policy and chief health equity officer at the University of Maryland’s medical system.

The influentia­l academy has begun purging outdated advice. It is committing to scrutinizi­ng its “entire catalog,” including guidelines, educationa­l materials, textbooks and newsletter articles, Wright said.

“We are really being much more rigorous about the ways in which we assess risk for disease and health outcomes,” Wright said. “We do have to hold ourselves accountabl­e in that way. It’s going to require a heavy lift.”

Dr. Brittani James, a family medicine doctor and medical director for a Chicago health center, said the academy is making a pivotal move.

“What makes this so monumental is the fact that this is a medical institutio­n, and it’s not just words. They’re acting,” James said.

In recent years, other major doctor groups including the American Medical Associatio­n have made similar pledges. They are spurred in part by civil rights and social justice movements, but also by science showing the strong roles that social conditions, genetics and other biological factors play.

Last year, the academy retired a guideline calculatio­n based on the unproven idea that Black children faced lower risks than white kids for urinary infections.

A review had shown that the strongest risk factors were prior urinary infections and fevers lasting

more than 48 hours, not race, Wright said.

A revision to its newborn jaundice guidance — which suggests certain races have higher and lower risks — is planned for this summer, Wright said.

Dr. Nia Heard-Garris, head of an academy group on minority health and equity and a pediatrici­an at Chicago’s Lurie Children’s Hospital, noted that the new policy includes a brief history “of how some of our frequently used clinical aids have come to be — via pseudoscie­nce and racism.”

Whatever the intent, these aids have harmed patients, she said.

“This violates our oath as physicians — to do no harm — and as such should not be used,” Heard-Garris said.

Dr. Valencia Walker, a specialist in newborn care and health equity at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, called the new policy “a critical step” toward reducing racial health disparitie­s.

The academy is urging other medical institutio­ns and specialty groups to take a similar approach in working to eliminate racism in medicine.

 ?? AMR ALFIKY/AP ?? A pediatrici­an examines a newborn baby in her clinic in 2019 in Chicago. The American Academy of Pediatrics says it intends to eliminate “race-based” medicine.
AMR ALFIKY/AP A pediatrici­an examines a newborn baby in her clinic in 2019 in Chicago. The American Academy of Pediatrics says it intends to eliminate “race-based” medicine.

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