To begin addressing racial bias in medicine, start with the skin – STAT – STAT

Until the color of a mans skin is of no more significance than the color of his eyes. Bob Marley, War

Racial inequity in the U.S. health system is, in many ways, far deadlier than police violence.

The failures of the health care industry to appropriately care for Black patients are well-documented, resulting in the lowest life expectancy of any major group in the U.S. In addition to poverty, lack of access to care, and inadequate treatment, people of color are also dying due to bias in medical education, clinicians insufficient exam skills, and lack of appropriate information tools. The medical community needs to wake up and start fixing the way we recruit, train, and equip clinicians to reverse the trend of Black Americans dying too early and too often.

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My specialty, dermatology, is a prime example of the kinds of changes we need.

The skin is considered a window into health. But clinicians who havent been properly trained often fail to see some conditions in patients with Black skin. Reggae pioneer Bob Marley died of melanoma, a treatable skin cancer that is often missed and misdiagnosed in Black people. It becomes fatal if left untreated.

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Ive seen patients of color misdiagnosed because clinicians could not recognize their rashes. Ive seen immunologic diseases such as lupus, life-threatening drug reactions, and other conditions that manifest themselves on the skin get missed for the same reasons. I recall one very ill patient who was transferred to our hospital two weeks after a life-threatening drug reaction began from a sulfa-based antibiotic used to treat a urinary tract infection. She had body-wide blistering and ended up in the burn unit because the nurse and physician who initially evaluated her did not recognize the early skin clues and missed the diagnosis entirely. It was a miracle that she survived.

What went wrong in that case is a sadly common occurrence.

Inflammation caused by increased blood flow appears red or pink on white skin. Thats what clinicians are trained to recognize. In brown or Black skin, though, inflammation often appears brown or violaceous. Most medical and nursing students, and even many experienced clinicians, dont know that because most medical textbooks severely underrepresent disease manifestations on pigmented skin. This failure to train clinicians to effectively diagnose disease in people with pigmented skin contributes to lopsidedly negative outcomes for Black patients.

But unlike many of the pervasive economic, historic, and cultural factors driving poor health in the Black community, we can fix this problem today by having health systems and medical and nursing schools teach the skin exam in people of color to reduce error and bias; train clinicians about specific treatments for diseases that occur more often in patients of color; and advance tools and education that position clinicians to provide excellent care for every patient.

Racial bias in medicine is also tied to the images clinicians use to communicate with their patients. Showing patients one or more pictures of their condition is highly effective for communicating a diagnosis, educating them, and building trust. This is especially true in the current environment of Covid-19 when telemedicine is increasingly being used. But when people of color have their clinicians explain a disease process with images that do not look like them or their condition, it creates confusion, undermines trust, and ultimately affects patient behavior and outcomes.

Early on in my career, I recognized that showing reference images to patients that represent not only their condition but also their skin type can transform the conversation. It takes less than a minute to show a patient a comparable image to explain his or her diagnosis, but it makes a monumental difference and it shows you took the time to care.

Practices, clinics, and hospitals need to diversify their patient education materials to start dissolving these barriers to better patient-doctor relationships and optimal patient health. Medical image databases, books, and decision support tools must showcase the entire spectrum of skin colors to better represent the diverse patient populations we care for. By teaching clinicians-to-be using a range of skin types, and increasing access to diverse images that build patient knowledge and trust, we can start bringing equity to the practice of medicine, diagnosis, and patient education.

The horrific death of George Floyd has led many white Americans like me to reexamine our personal biases and the structural racism that has plagued our country since its founding. Medical professionals must address racial disparities in care immediately and start taking the life-expectancy gap for Black Americans as seriously as any other factor contributing to the deaths of thousands of people every year. To do this, we all need to acknowledge that racism in medicine is not simply about poor access, inequitable care, or hiring bias it is also at the core of how we teach and practice medicine with people of color. We can, and must, do better.

Art Papier is a physician and CEO of VisualDx, a medical informatics company affiliated with the University of Rochester.

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To begin addressing racial bias in medicine, start with the skin - STAT - STAT

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