Taking racism out of clinical guidelines

Health systems continue to grapple with the deeply rooted consequences of systemic racism within healthcare. The immediacy of this challenge is evidenced in the recent Whitehead report,1 published in the UK, which highlights ethnic inequalities arising from the design and calibration of medical devices.Internationally, race and ethnicity remain common clinical discriminators for guiding decisions within medical guidelines. Alongside efforts to identify and tackle racial inequalities associated with medical devices, health systems globally need to urgently review the appropriateness of using ethnicity to guide treatment decisions and to critically re-examine the rationale for using race or ethnicity as a clinical tool.Race and ethnicity are constructs shaped by social and political factors with almost no biological basis. Historically, medicine has often attributed differences observed in ethnic minority populations to their biology and genetics, with limited or no scientific underpinning. The Human Genome Project has highlighted both substantial genetic variation between people of…
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