key: cord-0943820-6pst0jna authors: Brown-Johnson, Cati; Shankar, Megha; Taylor, Nicolas Kenji; Safaeinili, Nadia; Shaw, Jonathan G.; Winget, Marcy; Mahoney, Megan title: “Racial Bias…I’m Not Sure if It Has Affected My Practice”: a Qualitative Exploration of Racial Bias in Team-Based Primary Care date: 2020-09-15 journal: J Gen Intern Med DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-06219-w sha: 88d2ee51f9fedcb29ffeae325bf7e9ffdfb6685a doc_id: 943820 cord_uid: 6pst0jna nan In summer 2020, COVID-19 laid bare social determinants contributing to disproportional African-American death rates, 1 and #BlackLivesMatter protests decried police brutality and systematic racism that continue to exert daily pressure on African American lives. 2 These twin forces resulted in renewed commitment to health equity and criminal justice reform within the medical community. 3 Microaggressions including "microinvalidation"-the denial of racialized experiences of people of color-may more profoundly impact racial anger, frustration, and selfconfidence than overt forms of racism. 4 Furthermore, denial of racism prevents team members from realizing and confronting their role in causing traumatic reactions or perpetuating disparities. 5 As part of a 3-year mixed-methods evaluation of a novel teambased care (TBC) primary care model, Primary Care 2.0, 6 we added questions on rotating topics to standard quarterly implementation-focused interviews (standard interview guide and rotating topic questions available upon request). Our implementation science-informed evaluation actively sought to explore the impact of context, in this case national conversations about racial bias, since context is a known factor in successful implementation. Items of interest explored the potential role of racism and bias in TBC, effectively establishing a local baseline of reported #BlackLivesMatter impact, with this prompt: "How has #BlackLivesMatter and the national conversation about racial bias changed the way you interact with patients or people at work, if at all?" For this analysis we examined interview transcripts (n = 26, Table 1 ). A qualitative expert (CBJ) and two physicians (MS, NKT) collaboratively coded responses for themes; co-authors reached interpretive consensus with iterative discussions. We identified 7 major themes around two divergent foci: lack of acknowledgement of the role of racial bias in healthcare, and strategies to address racism (Table 2) . Nullifying themes included no impact (n = 13), denial (n = 7), and no awareness (n = 5). Strategies revolved around communication (n = 6), patient care adaptations (n = 3), and diversity in TBC (n = 2). Specifically, participants discussed the following: acknowledging previous negative healthcare experiences by asking new patients "How has healthcare been for you? Any barriers in the past?"; creating safe TBC cultures that encourage honest communication and support team discussions about racism; becoming aware of providers' own assumptions and leveraging that information to intentionally resist dismissing complaints from patients of color. Our interviews demonstrated a pre-2020 baseline of poor acknowledgment of the role of racism in interactions among our care team members and with patients. It is unknown whether these findings are unique to our time/setting, but they reflect previous research documenting a state of widespread denial of local impacts of racism in large system settings, which can include healthcare and academia. 4 Denial of racism may be a protective learned mechanism, but it can also perpetuate silence and inaction. 5 Denial, overt racism, and covert microaggression/microinvalidation can threaten highperforming healthcare teams. 4, 5 Responses to racism that promote racial justice, such as #BlackLivesMatter, may be particularly relevant to team- • "I think we're trying, and I don't think that there's anything different that we're doing." • "Yeah so for me personally I think I've always tried to practice keeping that in mind. I know a lot personally being a person of color, just how that can affect healthcare and access." Changes to patient care 3 • Assisting patients with insurance navigation: "We've had a lot of difficulties with Medi-Cal, insurancewise, and our staff is so committed to helping those patients… We still don't quite understand it. Medi-Cal's rules are changing, but we have a lot of Medi-Cal patients who have insurance questions that they're not getting answers for. But our staff is really committed to helping them and understanding what they have." • Providers becoming aware of their own assumptions about patients: "I really try to check my assumptions about who people are and what they do. Yeah. I'm not sure it's changed the conversation amongst staff members, but I'm more cognizant if I make an assumption about someone. Do I really have any facts for that? Where did that assumption come from?... it's an internal reflection." • Resist dismissing patient complaints: "I don't know if this is #BlackLivesMatter necessarily or race-related necessarily, but [I try to be] less likely to dismiss complaints. Like being aware that if this [patient] was someone of a different gender or a different race, would I respond differently to this particular complaint?... even providers of color [can] make those same assumptions." Diversity as need and asset 2 • Diversity of staff for team based care as an asset and a way to connect with patients: "... We see the huge variety of patients…[and] because we have a pretty multicultural staff, we are [able to connect] …speaking their language, understanding them, some of the customs." • Diversity needs in recruitment for faculty, but success with recruiting diverse staff: "We've tried to stay abreast about recruiting and representing minorities, but …we need to be a lot better. I think from the standpoint of recruiting we need to do a lot better in order to enhance our [faculty] diversity. Our staff is incredibly diverse." *Complementing qualitative interviews focused on implementation science outcomes and emergent topics such as racial bias, other evaluation activities were framed around the Quadruple Aim, and included tracking patient outcomes and satisfaction through HEDIS metrics and Press Ganey patient satisfaction results, assessing cost/value based on salaries for TBC team members, and biannual wellness Professional Fulfillment Index surveys for all staff and providers based primary care, which brings together interdisciplinary healthcare staff with diverse training and backgrounds. The American Medical Association's code of conduct emphasizes "[care] for the health of the community" and individual patient-provider relationships "based on trust." It additionally requires "patients' welfare above the physician's own selfinterest". Our respondents' specific anti-racism strategies align with this code, but may be uncomfortable for some team members. Suggested communication approaches include active listening and checking in with colleagues and patients about their experiences of racism; explicitly acknowledging patients' previous potentially negative interactions with healthcare; and staying informed of current events. Additional anti-racism strategies alluded to, but not overtly highlighted in our data, include promoting national-level change for equitable care regardless of race or other factors. This study is limited by its single-institution setting; we attempted to increase applicability by sampling multiple individual clinics and various level of staff. #BlackLivesMatter and COVID-19 disparities dominated US media in early summer 2020, potentially raising awareness around racism impacts in both the national collective awareness and local clinic settings. This awareness may afford teambased care a valuable window of opportunity to engage in individual reflection and group work around the legacy of racism. We hope this manuscript and others provide clues for individual and team behavior change, especially since our data demonstrate specific ways healthcare providers and staff can interact to potentially reduce racism's negative impact on health and healthcare. Cati Brown-Johnson, PhD 1 COVID-19 and Racial/Ethnic Disparities Structural racism and health inequities in the USA: evidence and interventions Police brutality must stop | American Medical Association Critical Race Theory, Racial Microaggressions, and Campus Racial Climate: The Experiences of African American College Students Racial microaggressions in everyday life: Implications for clinical practice Primary Care 2.0: Design of a Transformational Team-Based Practice Model to Meet the Quadruple Aim