• CMAJ · Jun 2024

    Variegated racism: exploring experiences of anti-Black racism and their progression in medical education.

    • Jacob Albin Korem Alhassan, Nikisha Shally Khare, and Azasma Tanvir.
    • Department of Community Health and Epidemiology (Alhassan), College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan, Sask.; Department of Family Medicine (Khare), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; College of Medicine (Tanvir), University of Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan, Sask. jacob.alhassan@usask.ca.
    • CMAJ. 2024 Jun 9; 196 (22): E751E759E751-E759.

    BackgroundAddressing anti-Black racism in medical education in Canada has become increasingly urgent as more Black learners enter medical institutions and bring attention to the racist harms they face. We sought to gather evidence of experiences of racism among Black medical learners and to explore the contexts within which racism is experienced by learners.MethodsDrawing on critical race and structural violence theories, we conducted interviews with Black medical faculty, students, residents, and staff at the University of Saskatchewan College of Medicine between May and July 2022. We thematically analyzed interviews using instrumental case study methodology.ResultsThematic analyses from 13 interviews revealed 5 central themes describing experiences of racism and the compounding nature of racist exposures as learners progressed in medicine. Medical learners experienced racism through uncomfortable encounters and microaggressions. Blatant acts of racism were instances where patients and superiors harmed students in various ways, including through use of the N-word by a superior in 1 instance. Learners also experienced curricular racism through the absence of the Black body in the curriculum and the undue pathologizing of Blackness. Medical hierarchies reinforced anti-Black racism by undermining accountability and protecting powerful perpetrators. Finally, Black women medical learners identified intersecting oppressions and misogynoir that compounded their experience of racism. We propose that experiences of racism may worsen as learners progress in medicine in part because of increases in the sources of and exposure to racism.InterpretationAnti-Black racism in medical education in Canada is experienced subtly through microaggressions or blatantly from different sources including medical faculty. As Black learners progress in medicine, anti-Black racism may become worse because of the compounding effects of exposures to a wider range of sources of racist behaviour.© 2024 CMA Impact Inc. or its licensors.

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