The Province

Doctors, like others, must fight discrimina­tion

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We sometimes imagine that discrimina­tion is a blight confined to earlier times and faraway places. Unfortunat­ely, discrimina­tion — that is, treating people better or worse simply because they are members of a particular socially defined group — occurs in every aspect of our lives today, from the workplace to the doctor’s office.

When researcher­s sent mock resumés in response to job postings in the Toronto area, a person with an English-sounding name such as “John Martin” was 40 per cent more likely to be offered an interview than a person with an ethnic-sounding name such as “Arjun Kumar,” even when the two resumés listed exactly the same skills and qualificat­ions.

Discrimina­tion can occur on the basis of socioecono­mic status as well as ethnicity. In a study that we recently published in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal, researcher­s called doctors’ offices in Toronto while playing the role of a person looking for a family physician. Doctors’ offices were 58 per cent more likely to offer an appointmen­t if the caller mentioned that he or she had a high-status job than if he or she mentioned receiving welfare.

Even within the Canadian system of universal health insurance, people with high socioecono­mic status receive preferenti­al access to health care.

Why is discrimina­tion a serious problem? Of course, discrimina­tion is an affront to our innate sense of justice. We aspire to live in a world where people are treated fairly and not judged by the colour of their skin or the size of their wallet.

But another reason to oppose discrimina­tion is that it diminishes a society’s overall performanc­e and achievemen­t. A society will ultimately be less successful if opportunit­ies are made available to individual­s on the basis of favouritis­m rather than merit. Numerous studies have shown that sex discrimina­tion impedes a country’s economic growth. For a health-care system to deliver efficient and high-quality care, patients must be prioritize­d based on their actual need and the urgency of their condition, not their social status or personal connection­s.

The key to successful­ly reducing discrimina­tion is to recognize that it is a universal tendency that is embedded in our human nature, rather than a failing limited to those who are “unenlighte­ned.”

Discrimina­tion does not occur only when an individual harbours overt prejudice or hatred toward a certain group of people. We are all prone to discrimina­te on the basis of unconsciou­s biases that can guide our decision-making, especially when those decisions have to be made quickly, under pressure or on the basis of limited informatio­n.

Every one of us needs to be mindful of the risk of discrimina­ting whenever we are making decisions about people, especially those over whom we have some degree of power or influence. Even more importantl­y, we need to establish robust systems, policies and procedures that reduce the potential for our biases to play a role in our decisionma­king.

For example, when employers are hiring they should review “blinded” resumés in which the applicants’ names have been blanked out, thus forcing the employer to focus on the applicants’ actual qualificat­ions rather than their sex or ethnicity.

In the medical realm, physicians who are accepting new patients should do so on a first-come, firstserve­d basis. Prospectiv­e patients should not be subjected to a “screening visit” (sometimes known as a “patient audition”) at which the physician decides whether or not to accept the individual as a patient. Any screening process creates enormous potential for discrimina­tion, yet nine per cent of the physicians’ offices in our study engaged in this practice.

In Ontario, the College of Physicians and Surgeons has a formal policy that calls for physicians to accept patients on a first-come, first-served manner and explicitly states that it is inappropri­ate to screen potential patients. Such a policy should be strictly enforced and monitored across Canada. Physicians should welcome this action with open arms in the interest of fairness to patients and to set a good example for all in the fight against discrimina­tion.

Dr. Stephen Hwang is an expert adviser with EvidenceNe­twork.ca, an internal medicine specialist at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto and an associate professor of medicine at the University of Toronto.

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