Health information equity: Rebalancing healthcare collections for racial diversity in UK public service contexts

Grace O’Driscoll, D. Bawden
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Abstract

COVID-19 illustrated health disparities experienced by racially minoritised people, with heightened risks faced by Black and South Asian communities lending the issue transparency and urgency. Despite efforts to decolonise medical education, deficits in racial representation in research and resources remain. This study investigates the potential and imperatives for healthcare information services to contribute to health equity through their collections. The literature analysis explores collection management, decolonisation, social justice in librarianship, and Critical Race Theory (CRT) as a framework for change in information contexts. A survey of UK National Health Service (NHS) librarians provides a snapshot of awareness of health information inequity. Semi-structured interviews explore information professionals’ experiences of anti-racism in the system. The findings indicate strong engagement with the need for equitable resources but highlight some barriers to success. Opportunities identified include potential for addressing systemic racism in collection policy, capability of information services to influence, or engage in, authorship and publishing to address gaps, and the need for race-based data standards in healthcare. Synthesis of the findings through a framework of CRT tenets illustrates the relevance and utility of CRT as a tool for pursuit of equity in information practice, scholarship, and education.
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健康信息公平:在英国公共服务背景下重新平衡种族多样性的医疗保健收集
2019冠状病毒病说明了少数族裔群体面临的健康差距,黑人和南亚社区面临的风险增加,使问题变得透明和紧迫。尽管努力使医学教育非殖民化,但在研究和资源方面的种族代表性仍然不足。本研究探讨医疗保健信息服务的潜力和必要性,以促进健康公平通过他们的收集。文献分析探讨了馆藏管理、非殖民化、图书馆事业中的社会正义,以及作为信息环境变化框架的批判种族理论(CRT)。一项对英国国民健康服务(NHS)图书馆员的调查提供了对健康信息不平等意识的快照。半结构化访谈探讨了信息专业人员在系统中反种族主义的经历。调查结果表明,人们强烈关注公平资源的需求,但也强调了成功的一些障碍。确定的机会包括解决收集政策中的系统性种族主义问题的潜力、信息服务部门影响或参与作者和出版以弥补差距的能力,以及在医疗保健中需要基于种族的数据标准。通过CRT原则框架的综合研究结果说明了CRT作为追求信息实践、学术和教育公平的工具的相关性和实用性。
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