Examining the inclusion of race and ethnicity in patient cases


Journal article


O. N. Okoro, V. Arya, C. A. Gaither, A. Tarfa
American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, vol. 85(9), 2021


Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Okoro, O. N., Arya, V., Gaither, C. A., & Tarfa, A. (2021). Examining the inclusion of race and ethnicity in patient cases. American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, 85(9). https://doi.org/10.5688/ajpe8583


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Okoro, O. N., V. Arya, C. A. Gaither, and A. Tarfa. “Examining the Inclusion of Race and Ethnicity in Patient Cases.” American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education 85, no. 9 (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Okoro, O. N., et al. “Examining the Inclusion of Race and Ethnicity in Patient Cases.” American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, vol. 85, no. 9, 2021, doi:10.5688/ajpe8583.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{okoro2021a,
  title = {Examining the inclusion of race and ethnicity in patient cases},
  year = {2021},
  issue = {9},
  journal = {American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education},
  volume = {85},
  doi = {10.5688/ajpe8583},
  author = {Okoro, O. N. and Arya, V. and Gaither, C. A. and Tarfa, A.}
}

Abstract

Health disparities continue to exist in the United States, with the most significant differences in care occurring between racial groups. Racial health disparities are largely a result of the strong association between race and structural inequities, (differentials in the distribution of power, resources, opportunities). The use of case-based learning is common practice in pharmacy education, and the race of the patient who is the subject of the case is often included out of convention. In some cases, race is included to inform treatment based on guidelines developed from epidemiological and clinical studies that link race to disease by conferring biological significance to race categories. This continuing use of race and ethnicity to guide treatment contributes to racial health disparities and may further perpetuate existing provider implicit bias. This paper discusses the pedagogical approach of using patient cases and the convention, propriety, and implications of including race in patient cases, and guides pharmacy educators in how to use information on race.



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