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. 2019 Jul 1;3(1):360–377. doi: 10.1089/heq.2019.0040

Table 3.

Proposed Supports for Underrepresented Physicians

Group Objective Targeted interventions proposed
All underrepresented physicians Burnout mitigation
Reduce stress
Reduce permanent, temporary, and full-time withdrawals from medical practice
Remove burnout as disincentive to medical career and/or specialty choice
Well-being programs146
Create and appoint chief wellness officers who implement strategies aimed at the practice environment, teamwork and community building, leadership engagement, compassion for self and colleagues, and support for physicians experiencing distress147
Studies aimed at better understanding the variation in burnout and career regret across specialties57
Bias training
Improve communication
Improve health outcomes
Improve patient satisfaction
Remove bias as a disincentive to medical career and/or specialty choice
Education regarding how explicit (conscious) or implicit (unconscious) bias as well as the continuum from microinequities to macroinequities or aggressions can impact both professional interactions and patient care26,148,149
Completion of the Black-White Implicit Association Test during training to increase awareness of personal implicit bias150
Reduction or avoidance of negative comments from higher ranking physicians or negative interactions with patients150
Use of equitable language during introductions,107 blinded grant applications,112 standardized letters of recommendation,151 and conscious editing to remove negative or stereotypic language from letters of recommendation109
Increased exposure to diversity in educational and workplace settings48,150
Education and competencies for physicians-in-training with respect to meeting the needs of LGBTQ+ and other sexual and gender minority groups and effective incorporation of this information into the medical curriculum and clinical experience152,153
Creation of an affirming climate and improved accessibility to accommodations for students with disabilities4
Cultural competency and sensitivity training
Improve communication
Improve patient access to care
Accelerate Triple Aim154
Remove cultural differences as a disincentive to medical career and/or specialty choice
Improve health outcomes
Enactment and/or recommendation of national mandates and guidelines to improve workforce diversity and require cultural competency training155–162
Frame cultural competency training in terms of developing understanding of both the patient's and the physician's own cultural backgrounds and unconscious biases163
Acknowledge cultural competency as a life-long process, not an end-point, analogous to developing cultural sensitivity or cultural humility163,164
Advocate for collaborative relationships that value differing points of view in an effort to improve outcomes164
Tailor interactions to patient social, cultural, and communication preferences and needs156,158
Increase access to high-quality care services for the medically underserved165
Assess institutional readiness to address patient communication and environmental needs158
Strengthen the medical research agenda by improving diversity among both researchers and study participants165
Expand the pool of medically trained executives ready for health care system and governmental leadership roles165
Patient-physician communication training
Improve exchange of information
Improve health outcomes
Maintain or reduce appointment length
Improve scheduling control
Improve patient satisfaction
Improve reimbursement outcomes
Use patient-centered, conversational communication style consisting of more individualized, reciprocal and supportive responses and notetaking122,166,167
Identify patient's preferred language, communication needs, and assistive devices158
Improve awareness of patient affective cues166,168
Use patient decision aids and navigation169
Encourage use and participation of patient companions170
Debt reduction and compensation equity
Remove debt as a disincentive to medical career and/or specialty choice, and/or practice location
Remove compensation inequity as a disincentive to medical career and/or specialty choice, and/or practice location
Free or reduced medical school tuition171–173
Loan repayment, repayment delays, or loan forgiveness174,175
School-sponsored financial planning courses and/or access to personal finance experts175
State-sponsored financial incentive programs to attract qualified professionals174
Transparency in and public reporting of administrative salary information89
Accountability and initiatives to combat inequity across specialties and institutions89,176–178
Transparency in defining criteria for compensation179
Base pay structures on objective criteria179
Mitigate implicit bias in compensation decisions, including those regarding salary and bonuses179
Diversity initiatives and workforce studies
Improve patient access to care
Accelerate Triple Aim154
Enhancement of diversity standards in medical and other professional training schools131,132,174
Establishment of workforce centers or clearinghouses to monitor data on the supply and demand for specific providers174
Evaluate the effectiveness of educational and workforce strategies174
Women physicians Sexual harassment Develop methodical approaches surveying and combating sexual harassment180
Within institutions and organizations, evaluate and address (1) perceived tolerance for sexual harassment, (2) male-dominated workforce, (3) hierarchal power structures, (4) symbolic compliance, and (5) uninformed leadership103
Create diverse and respectful environments, improve transparency and accountability, diffuse power, support the targeted individual, and promote strong and diverse leadership103
Gender discrimination Adoption of systematic guidelines to end gender discrimination and improve the advancement of women in medicine94,181
Support rising women physicians through sponsorship,182 equitable funding (grant and award),183 and equitable collaboration and representation among authors,97,98 award recipients,93,94,183 faculty, editorial boards,184 committee members,100 and presidents of medical specialty societies99
Improve parental support, including but not limited to “longer paid maternity leave, backup child care, lactation support, and increased schedule flexibility”79
Improve support for physicians as family caregivers19
Improve control over patient-related decision-making, including but not limited to selection of referral physicians and determination of hospital length of stay19
Improve control or influence over work environment such as space and facilities, clinic/office schedule, patient load, and patient characteristics19
URM physicians Access to medical education Increase public support for historically black medical schools133
Increase recruitment of URM physicians through holistic review of applications, conditional acceptance programs, outreach, scholarships, and branch campus locations185,186
Increase funding for k-12 education135
Support for and advancement in medical ranks Recruitment of minority physician faculty9,135
Medical specialty society support through education, pipeline programs, clinical care programs, position statements, advocacy, data management, research, and mentorship187
LGBTQ+ physicians Recruitment and workplace culture Applications allowing declaration of LGBTQ+ status as well as consideration of that status as strengthening applications to medical school188
Diversity hiring policies188
LGBTQ+ advocates campus-wide, LGBTQ+-friendly training, and LGBTQ+-friendly workplaces (e.g., gender inclusive restrooms)188
Partner benefits equivalent to those available to a traditional spouse (e.g., sick leave, maternity leave, and insurance coverage)188
Healthy coping strategies, social networks, professional networks, and advocacy groups189
Patient comfort, communication, and outcomes LGBTQ+-inclusive evidence-based educational materials188,190
LGBTQ+-inclusive forms and decision-making tools188,190
Physicians with disabilities Recruitment and workforce culture Include disability in discussions of diversity4,191,192
Increase recruitment193
Remove pressure on students and physicians to disclose the full nature of their disability4
Improve and standardize medical school technical standards194 addressing unclear, inconsistent, and lengthy policies and processes4
Define responsibility for accommodations4,194
Provide access to appropriate accommodations, personal and professional networks, peer support, and mentorship4
Expand study of barriers and accommodations supportive of physicians194–196
Patient comfort, communication, and outcomes Improve access, provider awareness, and communication, and address attitudinal barriers45–49,195,197–199