Affiliation:
1. Department of Emergency Medicine Yale School of Medicine
2. Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library
3. Yale University Library Yale School of Medicine
4. Ronald O. Perelman Department of Emergency Medicine New York University
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveIn recent years, the academic medicine community has produced numerous statements and calls to action condemning racism. Though health equity work examining health disparities has expanded, few studies specifically name racism as an operational construct. As emergency departments serve a high proportion of patients with social and economic disadvantage rooted in structural racism, it is critically important that racism be a focus of our academic discourse. This study examines the frequency at which four prominent Emergency Medicine journals, Annals of Emergency Medicine, Academic Emergency Medicine, the American Journal of Emergency Medicine, and the Western Journal of Emergency Medicine, publish on health disparities and racism.MethodsThis is a descriptive analysis measuring the frequency of publications on health disparities and racism in US‐based Emergency Medicine Journals from 2014 to 2021. The search strategies for the concepts of “racism” and “health disparities” used a combination of MeSH and keywords. These search strategies were developed based on prior literature and the MEDLINE®/PubMed® Health Disparities and Minority Health Search Strategy. Articles identified through the PubMed search were then reviewed by two authors for final inclusion.ResultsSince 2014, 6,248 articles were published by the four emergency medicine journals over the eight‐year study period. Of those, 82 research papers that focused on health disparities were identified and only 16 that focused on racism. Most Emergency Medicine publications on racism and health disparities were in 2021.ConclusionOur findings suggest that the national discourse on racism and calls to action within emergency medicine were followed by an increase in publications on health disparities and racism. Continued investigation is needed to evaluate these trends moving forward.
Subject
Emergency Medicine,General Medicine