Intersectional characterization of emergency department (ED) staff experiences of racism: a survey of ED healthcare workers for the Disrupting Racism in Emergency Medicine (DRiEM) Investigators.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2023-07-01 DOI:10.1007/s43678-023-00533-y
Kanisha Cruz-Kan, Brenden Dufault, Lula Fesehaye, Jodi Kornelsen, Carmen Hrymak, Shelly Zubert, Paul Ratana, Murdoch Leeies
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Abstract

Introduction: The impact of racism on patient outcomes in Emergency Medicine has been examined but there have been few studies exploring the experiences of racism in health care workers. This survey aims to explore the experience of racism by interdisciplinary staff in a tertiary ED. By characterizing the staff experience of racism in the ED, we hope to inform the design of strategies to disrupt racism and ultimately improve the health and wellness of both staff and patients.

Methods: We conducted a self-administered, cross-sectional survey to explore the reported experience of racism by healthcare workers in a single urban ED in an academic trauma centre. We employed classification and regression tree analyses to evaluate predictors of racism through an intersectional lens.

Results: A majority (n = 200, 75%) of all ED staff reported experiencing interpersonal racism (including physical violence, direct verbal violence, mistreatment and/or microaggressions) in the workplace. Respondents who identified as racialized self-reported significantly more racism at work than white respondents (86% vs. 63%, p < 0.001). Occupation, race, migrant status and age were identified through intersectional machine-learning models to be significantly predictive of the experience of racism. Nearly all respondents felt that the disruption of racism in Emergency medicine is important to them (90%, n = 207) and (93%, n = 214) were willing to participate in further training in anti-racism.

Conclusions: Racism against interdisciplinary staff working in EDs is common and the burden on healthcare workers is high. Intersections of occupation, race, age and migrant status are uniquely predictive of the experience of racism for EM staff. Interventions to disrupt racism should be informed by intersectional considerations to create a safe working environment and target populations most at risk. ED healthcare workers are willing to take steps to disrupt racism in their workplace and need institutional support to do so.

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急诊科(ED)工作人员种族主义经历的交叉特征:急诊科医护人员对急诊医学中破坏种族主义(DRiEM)调查员的调查。
引言:在急诊医学中,种族主义对患者预后的影响已经得到了检验,但很少有研究探索卫生保健工作者的种族主义经历。本调查旨在探讨高等教育急诊科跨学科工作人员的种族主义经历。通过描述急诊科工作人员的种族主义经历,我们希望为设计破坏种族主义的策略提供信息,最终改善工作人员和患者的健康和福祉。方法:我们进行了一项自我管理的横断面调查,以探讨在一个学术创伤中心的单个城市急诊科的医护人员所报告的种族主义经历。我们采用分类和回归树分析,通过交叉视角来评估种族主义的预测因素。结果:大多数(n = 200,75%)的ED员工报告在工作场所经历过人际种族主义(包括身体暴力、直接言语暴力、虐待和/或微侵犯)。被认为是种族化的受访者自我报告的工作中的种族主义明显多于白人受访者(86%比63%)。结论:针对急诊室跨学科工作人员的种族主义很常见,卫生保健工作者的负担很高。职业、种族、年龄和移民身份的交集,对新兴市场员工的种族主义经历具有独特的预测性。破坏种族主义的干预措施应综合考虑各种因素,以创造一个安全的工作环境,并以风险最大的人群为目标。急诊科医护人员愿意采取措施,在他们的工作场所破坏种族主义,并需要机构的支持。
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来源期刊
Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine
Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
12.50%
发文量
171
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: CJEM is a peer-reviewed journal owned by CAEP. CJEM is published every 2 months (January, March, May, July, September and November). CJEM presents articles of interest to emergency care providers in rural, urban or academic settings. Publishing services are provided by the Canadian Medical Association.
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