TY - JOUR
T1 - Healing Health Care Disparities
T2 - Development and Pilot Testing of a Virtual Reality Implicit Bias Training Module for Physicians in the Context of Black Maternal Health
AU - Thompson, Charee M.
AU - Bishop, Mardia J.
AU - Dillard, Tiffani C.
AU - Maurice, Joseph M.
AU - Rollins, Déjà D.
AU - Pulido, Manuel D.
AU - Salas, M. J.
AU - Mendelson, Emily A.
AU - Yan, Jia
AU - Gerlikovski, Emily R.
AU - Benevento, Sarah V.
AU - Zeinstra, Corey
AU - Kesavadas, Thenkurussi
N1 - The authors thankfully acknowledge the competitive innovation funding provided at the 2021 Health Make-a-Thon by the University of Illinois Carle Illinois College of Medicine, Health Maker Lab toward the fabrication of the prototype. This project was also funded by the Jump ARCHES endowment through the Health Care Engineering Systems Center. We would like to thank Victoria Fields and Benjamin Gailey for their contributions to the development of the training assessed in this manuscript.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Grounded in communication models of cultural competence, this study reports on the development and testing of the first module in a larger virtual reality (VR) implicit bias training for physicians to help them better: (a) recognize implicit bias and its effects on communication, patients, and patient care; (b) identify their own implicit biases and exercise strategies for managing them; and (c) learn and practice communicating with BIPOC patients in a culture-centered manner that demonstrates respect and builds trust. Led by communication faculty, a large, interdisciplinary team of researchers, clinicians, and engineers developed the first module tested herein focused on training goal (a). Within the module, participants observe five scenes between patient Marilyn Hayes (a Black woman) and Dr. Richard Flynn (her obstetrician, a White man) during a postpartum visit. The interaction contains examples of implicit bias, and participants are asked to both identify and consider how implicit bias impacts communication, the patient, and patient care. The team recruited 30 medical students and resident physicians to participate in a lab-based study that included a pretest, a training experience of the module using a head-mounted VR display, and a posttest. Following the training, participants reported improved attitudes toward implicit bias instruction, greater importance of determining patients’ beliefs and perspectives for history-taking, treatment, and providing quality health care; and greater communication efficacy. Participants’ agreement with the importance of assessing patients’ perspectives, opinions, and psychosocial and cultural contexts did not significantly change. Implications for medical education about cultural competency and implicit bias are discussed.
AB - Grounded in communication models of cultural competence, this study reports on the development and testing of the first module in a larger virtual reality (VR) implicit bias training for physicians to help them better: (a) recognize implicit bias and its effects on communication, patients, and patient care; (b) identify their own implicit biases and exercise strategies for managing them; and (c) learn and practice communicating with BIPOC patients in a culture-centered manner that demonstrates respect and builds trust. Led by communication faculty, a large, interdisciplinary team of researchers, clinicians, and engineers developed the first module tested herein focused on training goal (a). Within the module, participants observe five scenes between patient Marilyn Hayes (a Black woman) and Dr. Richard Flynn (her obstetrician, a White man) during a postpartum visit. The interaction contains examples of implicit bias, and participants are asked to both identify and consider how implicit bias impacts communication, the patient, and patient care. The team recruited 30 medical students and resident physicians to participate in a lab-based study that included a pretest, a training experience of the module using a head-mounted VR display, and a posttest. Following the training, participants reported improved attitudes toward implicit bias instruction, greater importance of determining patients’ beliefs and perspectives for history-taking, treatment, and providing quality health care; and greater communication efficacy. Participants’ agreement with the importance of assessing patients’ perspectives, opinions, and psychosocial and cultural contexts did not significantly change. Implications for medical education about cultural competency and implicit bias are discussed.
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U2 - 10.1080/10410236.2024.2347000
DO - 10.1080/10410236.2024.2347000
M3 - Article
C2 - 38711251
AN - SCOPUS:86000381777
SN - 1041-0236
VL - 40
SP - 445
EP - 456
JO - Health communication
JF - Health communication
IS - 3
ER -