About this Research Topic
One strategy has focused on recruitment as early as elementary school to build the bachelors to doctorate in science, technology, engineering, mathematics and medicine pipeline. But more data are needed to determine efficacy and cost-effectiveness of these efforts. While efforts to diversify physician workforce are underway, there needs to be better guidance on strategies and best practices for retaining our URM physicians, as well as caring for minority ethnic people irrespective of physician identities. For example, to what degree is physician workforce disparity (inequities in advancement, unequal pay, experiences with microaggression) negatively impacting physician retention? Can we overcome the race/ethnic physician-patient discordance with education on cultural humility, bias and anti-racism training? Why is there a lack of systematic documentation of care perception (access, equality, quality, decision-making input and overall satisfaction) from people of intercultural background that includes intersectionality such as race, age, gender, sexual orientation, religion, physical abilities, health beliefs and others?
The scope of the Research Topic includes historical perspectives on forms of racism, discrimination, and the systems that support them still today. We are also interested in research looking at pipeline programs; changes in laws such as affirmative action; advancements in medical school admission policies; patient and family perception of health outcomes based on physician demographics; qualitative and quantitative health care equity research based on physician-patient race concordance. We are also seeking personal stories - asset-based stories (Opinion or Commentary Article Type) that exemplify the positive contributions to leadership, the academy, and overall society by historically excluded groups in medicine. We welcome descriptive manuscripts on innovative ideas to diversify the physician workforce and to retain them once they have been recruited. Manuscripts describing intervention evaluations of programs to diversify the workforce would be especially appreciated.
Keywords: Physician, Diversity, Underrepresented groups, Medicine, Health outcomes
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.