The Toxic Mix of Multiculturalism and Medicine: The Credentialing and Professional-Entry Experience for Persons of African Descent

Author:

Foster Lorne1

Affiliation:

1. School of Public Policy & Administration (SPPA), Institute for Social Research (ISR), York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada

Abstract

This essay is based on a case study of international medical graduates (IMGs) in Canada who migrated from sub-Saharan Africa. The chapter examines how narratives of race are situated and deployed in the field of medicine and can produce some aversive social–psychological landscapes in the credentialing and the professional-entry process as it relates to persons of African descent. It will show that, often without predetermination or intent, professionals of African descent in Canada are highly susceptible to implicit racial associations and implicit racial stereotyping in relation to evaluations of character, credentials, and culture. The article exposes some of the critical intersections of common experience, such as: (a) cultural deficit bias—Whiteness as an institutionalized cultural capital attribute; (b) confirmation bias—reaching a negative conclusion and working backwards to find evidence to support it; (c) repurposed sub-Saharan Blackness stereotypes—binary forms of techno-scamming and fraud; and (d) biased deception judgement—where the accuracy of deception judgements deteriorates when made across cultures. These social psychological phenomena result in significantly disproportionate returns on their foreign education and labour market experience for Black medical professionals that require decisive efforts in changing the narratives.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference116 articles.

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2. Anderson, Lydia E., and Bolt, Sandra B. (2016). Professionalism: Skills for Workplace Success, Prentice Hall. [4th ed.].

3. Autry, Meg (2024, February 03). White Fragility in Academic Medicine. Medical Education School of Medicine, Available online: https://meded.ucsf.edu/news/white-fragility-academic-medicine.

4. Backhouse, Constance (1999). Colour-Coded: A Legal History of Racism in Canada, 1900–1950, Published for The Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History by University of Toronto Press.

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