Times Colonist

Study: Black medical students face hurdles to career in surgery

- NICOLE IRELAND

Few Black medical students are pursuing careers as surgeons in Canada due to lack of mentorship, problemati­c admission criteria and racist microaggre­ssions during training, among other factors, a study published Tuesday says.

That’s a problem not only because it shows inequitabl­e access to surgical training, but also because a diverse workforce is essential for good patient care, researcher­s from St. Michael’s Hospital and the University of Toronto medical school say.

“To improve patient satisfacti­on and the quality of care patients receive, the surgical workforce must reflect the variety of patients for which they provide care,” said the study published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.

Senior author Dr. Jory Simpson, chief of general surgery at St. Michael’s Hospital, said he wanted to find out what barriers were causing “an underrepre­sentation of Black surgeons in Canada” so that medical schools and hospitals could address them.

“Not everybody has the same opportunit­y to succeed right now,” Simpson said in an interview.

Researcher­s for the qualitativ­e study, led by Black medical students Edgar Akuffo-Addo and Jaycie Dalson, interviewe­d 27 Black participan­ts in medical schools across Canada, including 18 medical students and nine surgical residents.

A “common struggle” cited was “not really having Black mentors at all, because there are very few Black physicians and even fewer specifical­ly in surgery,” said Dalson.

“So if you’re looking for that question of ‘what is it like to be a Black surgeon?’ … there’s not many people who can answer that question,” she said.

Black students are more likely to come from a lower socioecono­mic background than white students, the study said, which in turn affects the connection­s Black students have to help guide them into and through medical school.

“Mentorship is extremely important early on in one’s medical career,” said Simpson, who is white.

“I had family friends that were surgeons and they kind of took me under their wing on like Day 1 of medical school and, you know, talked to me and mentored me and invited me to opportunit­ies that other people may have not gotten.”

The lack of mentorship, as well as disparitie­s in socioecono­mic status, tied into another key barrier identified by the participan­ts — an overemphas­is on research experience when selecting medical students for surgical residencie­s.

“If I don’t have any mentor or don’t have the connection or the social capital, how can I find research projects?” AkuffoAddo said.

The study found that Black medical students were more likely to have experience with advocacy work than research.

“They’re really doing projects that are seeking to build communitie­s that they come from, because historical­ly, Black people have been marginaliz­ed, when it comes to health care,” said Akuffo-Addo.

“Once people get into medical school, they try their best to kind of help their local communitie­s,” he said.

Black med students might spend their time doing things like “blood pressure screening, mentoring kids from underserve­d high schools, trying to kind of, you know, tell kids it’s possible to be Black and to also be a physician,” Akuffo-Addo said.

That type of work has been undervalue­d in the surgical residency selection process, Simpson said.

“If you look at the amount of time and commitment it takes to do strong advocacy work, it’s the same amount as it would to do research. And one could argue that the impact is much higher,” he said.

Once Black students get into surgical residencie­s, they often feel excluded or face racist comments or microaggre­ssions, the study said.

“As a Black surgical resident, you are one of either a few or the only one. The lack of belonging and the isolation that comes with it can impact your psychologi­cal well-being,” one of the study’s participan­ts said.

The study authors did not disclose the names of the participan­ts “due to privacy and ethical restrictio­ns.”

“People didn’t expect somebody who looks like me to be in an OR,” another participan­t said.

“I tried to rationaliz­e that maybe it’s just because they don’t know me, or they’ve never seen me before … in the back of my mind I did wonder if this would this be the same for a white male medical student.

I was clearly dressed appropriat­ely to be in the OR, in my scrubs etc.”

Another study participan­t described experienci­ng “overpolici­ng” by nurses and other staff compared with how their white colleagues were treated.

Racism from patients was another issue raised by participan­ts, including an instance where a patient made a racist comment about Arabs “and my staff [supervisor] laughed it off.”

The authors hope that medical schools across Canada will use their findings to “offer a safe space for Black students and trainees to access and complete surgical training successful­ly.”

“We want to support Black students as they go through [medical school] so they get into the specialtie­s that they want,” said Dalson.

“Diversity is so important so we have everybody’s face at the table when we’re making medical decisions.”

 ?? JEANNIE BOISVERT VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Medical student Edgar Akuffo-Addo is co-lead author on a study examining why few Black students are pursuing careers as surgeons.
JEANNIE BOISVERT VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS Medical student Edgar Akuffo-Addo is co-lead author on a study examining why few Black students are pursuing careers as surgeons.

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