Article Text
Abstract
Discrimination and inequalities in healthcare can be experienced by many patients due to many characteristics ranging from the obviously visible to the more subtly noticeable, such as race and ethnicity, legal status, social class, linguistic fluency, health literacy, age, gender and weight. Discrimination can take a number of forms including overt racist statement, stereotyping or explicit and implicit attitudes and biases. This paper presents the case study of a complex transcultural clinical encounter between the mother of a young infant in a highly vulnerable social situation and a hospital healthcare team. In this clinical setting, both parties experienced difficulties, generating explicit and implicit negative attitudes that heightened into reciprocal mistrust, conflict and distress. The different factors influencing their conscious and unconscious biases will be analysed and discussed to offer understanding of the complicated nature of human interactions when faced with vulnerability in clinical practice. This case vignette also illustrates how, even in institutions with long-standing experience and many internal resources to address diversity and vulnerability, cultural competence remains a constant challenge.
- Clinical Ethics
- Cultural Pluralism
- Minorities
- Patient perspective
- Decision-making
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- A qualitative study of cancer care professionals’ experiences of working with migrant patients from diverse cultural backgrounds
- Beliefs and challenges held by medical staff about providing emergency care to migrants: an international systematic review and translation of findings to the UK context
- P85 How to tackle unintentional discrimination in primary health care: general practitioners’ implicit biases and cultural competence
- A Qualitative evaluation in community settings in England exploring the experiences of coaches delivering the NHS Low Calorie Diet programme pilot to ethnically diverse participants
- Effect of e-cigarette advertisements and antismoking messages on explicit and implicit attitudes towards tobacco and e-cigarette smoking in 18–65-year-olds: a randomised controlled study protocol
- FRI0745-HPR Implicit and explicit attitudes and associations of rheumatoid arthritis patients towards conventional disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs as possible targets for improving medication adherence
- Study protocol for investigating physician communication behaviours that link physician implicit racial bias and patient outcomes in Black patients with type 2 diabetes using an exploratory sequential mixed methods design
- Exploring early discontinuation of mental health outpatient treatment: language, demographics and clinical characteristics among migrant populations in Japan
- Deservingness: migration and health in social context
- Usefulness and practicality of a multidisease screening programme targeting migrant patients in primary care in Spain: a qualitative study of general practitioners