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Recognizing and Reacting to Microaggressions in Medicine and Surgery

Authors :
Amalia Cochran
Arghavan Salles
Madeline B. Torres
Source :
JAMA Surgery. 154:868
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Medical Association (AMA), 2019.

Abstract

Diversity and inclusion in medicine, and in surgery in particular, still merit substantial attention in 2019. With each increase in academic rank there are fewer women, with only 24% of full professors in medicine being women. Underrepresented minorities face similar challenges, with only 3% of medical faculty being black and 4% of medical faculty being Hispanic or Latino; only 2% of full professors are Hispanic or Latino and only another 2% are black. Explicit discrimination unfortunately still does exist, but in many environments, more subtle forms of bias are more prevalent. Microaggressions, which are categorized as microassaults, microinsults, microinvalidations, and environmental microaggressions, are indirect expressions of prejudice that contribute to the maintenance of existing power structures and may limit the hiring, promotion, and retention of women and underrepresented minorities. The primary goal of this communication is to help readers understand microaggressions and their effect. We also provide suggestions for how recipients or bystanders may respond to microaggressions.

Details

ISSN :
21686254
Volume :
154
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b4a9e8ae16720c3a38795bfe26124ff3