Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Osteopathic medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Context
Race is a social construct, not a biological or genetic construct, utilized to categorize people based on observable traits, behaviors, and geographic location. Findings from the Human Genome Project demonstrated that humans share 99.9% of their DNA; despite this evidence, race is frequently utilized as a risk factor for diagnosis and prescribing practices. Diagnosing and treating people based on race is known as race-based medicine. Race-based medicine perpetuates biases and diverts attention and resources from the social determinants of health that cause racial health inequities. Minimal research has examined medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine.
Objectives
The purpose of this study was to assess osteopathic medical students’ knowledge, beliefs, and experiences with race-based medicine.
Methods
We conducted a descriptive, cross-sectional survey study to assess osteopathic medical students’ knowledge, beliefs, and experiences with race-based medicine. An electronic, anonymous survey was distributed to all osteopathic medical students enrolled at a medical school in the Midwest with three campuses during the 2019–2020 academic year. Participants completed a brief demographic questionnaire and the Race-Based Medicine Questionnaire. Descriptive and inferential statistics were conducted utilizing SPSS statistical software version 28.0, and statistical significance was defined as a p<0.05. Open-ended questions were analyzed utilizing content and thematic analyses.
Results
A total of 438 of the 995 osteopathic medical students consented to participate in the study, for a response rate of 44.0%. Among those participants, 221 (52.0%) reported that they had heard of the term “race-based medicine.” Familiarity with the term differed by racial background (χ [2] = 24.598, p<0.001), with Black or African American participants indicating greater familiarity with the term compared to all other races. Of the participants familiar with race-based medicine, 79 (44.4%) provided the correct definition for the term; this finding did not differ by any sociodemographic variable. Part of the way through the questionnaire, all participants were provided the correct definition of “race-based medicine” and asked if they thought medical schools should teach race-based medicine. The majority of participants (n=231, 61.4%) supported the teaching of race-based medicine. Qualitative findings elaborated on participants’ support or opposition for teaching race-based medicine in medical school. Those in support explained the importance of teaching historical perspectives of race-based medicine as well as race as a data point in epidemiology and its presence on board examinations, whereas those in opposition believed it contradicted osteopathic principles and practice.
Conclusions
Findings showed half of the participants were familiar with race-based medicine, and among those, less than half knew the definition of the term. Highlighting osteopathic philosophy and its focus on the whole person may be one approach to educating osteopathic medical students about race-based medicine.
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Title: Osteopathic medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine
Description:
Abstract
Context
Race is a social construct, not a biological or genetic construct, utilized to categorize people based on observable traits, behaviors, and geographic location.
Findings from the Human Genome Project demonstrated that humans share 99.
9% of their DNA; despite this evidence, race is frequently utilized as a risk factor for diagnosis and prescribing practices.
Diagnosing and treating people based on race is known as race-based medicine.
Race-based medicine perpetuates biases and diverts attention and resources from the social determinants of health that cause racial health inequities.
Minimal research has examined medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine.
Objectives
The purpose of this study was to assess osteopathic medical students’ knowledge, beliefs, and experiences with race-based medicine.
Methods
We conducted a descriptive, cross-sectional survey study to assess osteopathic medical students’ knowledge, beliefs, and experiences with race-based medicine.
An electronic, anonymous survey was distributed to all osteopathic medical students enrolled at a medical school in the Midwest with three campuses during the 2019–2020 academic year.
Participants completed a brief demographic questionnaire and the Race-Based Medicine Questionnaire.
Descriptive and inferential statistics were conducted utilizing SPSS statistical software version 28.
0, and statistical significance was defined as a p<0.
05.
Open-ended questions were analyzed utilizing content and thematic analyses.
Results
A total of 438 of the 995 osteopathic medical students consented to participate in the study, for a response rate of 44.
0%.
Among those participants, 221 (52.
0%) reported that they had heard of the term “race-based medicine.
” Familiarity with the term differed by racial background (χ [2] = 24.
598, p<0.
001), with Black or African American participants indicating greater familiarity with the term compared to all other races.
Of the participants familiar with race-based medicine, 79 (44.
4%) provided the correct definition for the term; this finding did not differ by any sociodemographic variable.
Part of the way through the questionnaire, all participants were provided the correct definition of “race-based medicine” and asked if they thought medical schools should teach race-based medicine.
The majority of participants (n=231, 61.
4%) supported the teaching of race-based medicine.
Qualitative findings elaborated on participants’ support or opposition for teaching race-based medicine in medical school.
Those in support explained the importance of teaching historical perspectives of race-based medicine as well as race as a data point in epidemiology and its presence on board examinations, whereas those in opposition believed it contradicted osteopathic principles and practice.
Conclusions
Findings showed half of the participants were familiar with race-based medicine, and among those, less than half knew the definition of the term.
Highlighting osteopathic philosophy and its focus on the whole person may be one approach to educating osteopathic medical students about race-based medicine.
Related Results
Technology use and satisfaction among colleges/schools of osteopathic medical education
Technology use and satisfaction among colleges/schools of osteopathic medical education
Abstract
Context
In March 2020, as the COVID-19 pandemic became a national concern, quick assessment and rapid changes ne...
Implementation of an osteopathic manipulative medicine clinic at an allopathic teaching hospital: a research-based experience
Implementation of an osteopathic manipulative medicine clinic at an allopathic teaching hospital: a research-based experience
Abstract
Mastery of osteopathic palpatory skills and the skilled delivery of osteopathic manipulative treatment is a life-long venture that demands from practitioner...
Perspectives of Osteopathic Medical Students on Preclinical Urology Exposure: A Single Institution Cross Sectional Survey
Perspectives of Osteopathic Medical Students on Preclinical Urology Exposure: A Single Institution Cross Sectional Survey
ABSTRACTContextThere is an increasing number of medical school graduates opting for surgical specialties and the osteopathic applicant match rate for urology is lower than that of ...
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
When characters in the Fox Television sitcom The Mindy Project call Mindy Lahiri fat, Mindy sees it as a case of misidentification. She reminds the character that she is a “petite ...
The impact of osteopathic correction on the life quality of pregnant women
The impact of osteopathic correction on the life quality of pregnant women
Introduction. The development of pregnancy is accompanied by a number of regular structural and functional changes in a woman′s body, which, in turn, can both reduce the level of l...
Teaching and Engaging International Students
Teaching and Engaging International Students
International student mobility has been increasingly subject to turbulences in politics, culture, economics, natural disasters, and public health. The new deca...
Comparing medical knowledge of osteopathic medical trainees in DO and MD programs: a random effect meta-analysis
Comparing medical knowledge of osteopathic medical trainees in DO and MD programs: a random effect meta-analysis
Abstract
The authors used random effect meta-analysis to synthesize eight mean score differences of the Part III/Level3 examinations of the National Board of Osteopa...
Current Trends in Female Osteopathic Orthopedic Surgery Residents10.70709/FT09876-BQ
Current Trends in Female Osteopathic Orthopedic Surgery Residents10.70709/FT09876-BQ
Background
Matching into competitive surgical specialties, including orthopedic surgery, has been a competitive task for medical students; however, Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine ...

