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Abstract
Patients and their families come with prejudices and biases that include how they view providers. Providers, in turn, must sometimes care for people whose beliefs, actions or words they may find objectionable. Discrimination against health-care providers, including refusing care from a provider and requesting another based on race, ethnicity, religion, gender, age or sexual orientation, is a complex issue for all involved, especially leadership. ‘The needs of the patient come first’ has historically meant respecting and yielding to patient requests and caring for everyone with professionalism, regardless of one’s personal opinions. Much more work is needed to effect meaningful change so that all may benefit from broad culture-changing responses, guidelines and formal anti-discrimination policy statements. Patient satisfaction and the needs of the patient have always been paramount, but providers should not have to tolerate a work environment fraught with racism, hostility, verbal abuse and threats. While the emphasis on patient-centred care remains steadfast, it is time to expand the conversation to include the importance of provider satisfaction and well-being: the ‘Quadruple Aim’.
The full article is available to subscribers to the journal.
Author's Biography
Peter Kalina is a neuroradiologist at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, USA, and Associate Professor of Radiology at Mayo Clinic School of Medicine. He is also the Chair of Diversity and Inclusion for the Department of Radiology. He is former president of the Minnesota Radiological Society and former chair of the American College of Radiology Committee on Ethics. He is a fellow of the American College of Radiology. In June 2018 he earned his Master of Business Administration (MBA) with an emphasis on healthcare leadership.
Citation
Kalina, Peter (2018, September 1). Patient bias and discrimination towards providers. In the Management in Healthcare: A Peer-Reviewed Journal, Volume 3, Issue 1. https://doi.org/10.69554/ODUY7234.Publications LLP