Ensuring medication safety for consumers from ethnic minority backgrounds: The need to address unconscious bias within health systems.
Ashfaq ChauhanRamesh Lahiru WalpolaPublished in: International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care (2021)
Medication safety remains a pertinent issue for health systems internationally, with patients from ethnic minority backgrounds recognized at increased risk of exposure to harm resulting from unsafe medication practices. While language and communication barriers remain a central issue for medication safety for patients from ethnic minority backgrounds, increasing evidence suggests that unconscious bias can alter practitioner behaviours, attitudes and decision-making leading to unsafe medication practices for this population. Systemwide, service and individual level approaches such as cultural competency training and self-reflections are used to address this issue, however, the effectiveness of these strategies is not known. While engagement is proposed to improve patient safety, the strategies currently used to address unconscious bias seem tokenistic. We propose that including consumers from ethnic minority backgrounds in design and delivery of the education programs for health professionals, allocating extra time to understand their needs and preferences in care, and co-designing engagement strategies to improve medication related harm with diverse ethnic minority groups are key to mitigating medication related harm arising as a result of unconscious bias.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- patient safety
- adverse drug
- end stage renal disease
- decision making
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- quality improvement
- chronic kidney disease
- randomized controlled trial
- prognostic factors
- palliative care
- social media
- autism spectrum disorder
- mental health
- emergency department
- chronic pain
- patient reported outcomes