Racism and Covid-19: The Unmasking of Two Pandemics

This article discusses racism in nursing and how organizations can recognize racism and implicit bias. Commentary by Stacy Winters, CRNP Nurses General Nursing Article

Updated:  

Racism in healthcare is real. It is so pervasive and sinister, it is expected. Many accept it as an unwelcomed guest, but the White privileged exploit it as a weapon at will.

Have you ever walked into a patient's room and been told? " I don't want a Black nurse?" I have.

Have you ever applied for a nursing position only to find out that someone with less experience and education was offered the position because the manager "liked" them? I have.

Have you ever had a patient say? " You people think since Obama was in office you actually know everything." I have.

Nurses and Racism

Today, there are approximately 3.8 million nurses in the United States. However, only 9% of Registered Nurses and 6.6% of Nurse Practitioners are African American. Unfortunately, many Black nurses and nurse practitioners experience racism daily.

The Nursing Times (2019) stated that two-thirds of nurses working in the National Health Service (NHS) witnesses discrimination and 50% experienced racism. The most prevalent incidents that nurses experienced were:

  • racist language from patients to staff
  • limited career opportunities
  • lack of support by management

Discriminatory Acts or Inequalities

Large scale studies on discriminatory acts or inequalities against Black nurses in the United States are eerily sporifice. Perhaps this reflects the problem itself. However, anecdotal evidence and surveys provide insight into racism in nursing. Black nurses routinely are told by White patients “I don’t want a Black nurse.” Such statements are painful and jolting to Black nurses though not surprising. According to a Johns Hopkins survey (2002), most patients prefer staff that look like them. Results from the Project Prejudice: When Credentials Are Not Enough survey showed that 59% of nurses and 59% of nurse practitioners experienced offensive remarks from patients. Twenty-six percent of the remarks were race-based. What is even more disturbing is the response by hospitals. Hospital leadership from charge nurses to administrators routinely remove Black nurses and reassign a White nurse rather than supporting the Black nurses. Hospitals seem to care more about the patient experience than confronting the White patient. Yes, this is healthcare’s “open secret.” One disturbing example of racism includes an African American nurse in Michigan who sued her hospital after her hospital administration accommodated a White patient who posted a note stating that no African American nurses should care for his newborn baby. This is one story but there are countless untold stories of Black nurses who experience racism.

FACT: It’s time to look at racism as a primary driver in healthcare inequality and health disparities.

Racism is the Fire but Implicit Bias is the Fuel

Implicit bias, the unconscious attitude that contributes to discriminatory practices, must be addressed in nursing. First, implicit bias must be recognized. Organizations must ask the difficult questions:

  • How does implicit bias manifest in my nursing organization?
  • Does my organization reflect my population?
  • Are there Black nurses in leadership?
  • Are there Black charge nurses, clinical nurse specialists, clinical managers, clinical educators or directors of nursing? If not, why?

Hospitals can take cues from major healthcare organizations on how to address racism.

The First Step in Combating Racism is to Acknowledge it Exists

Two major healthcare organizations, American Medical Association (AMA, 2020) and the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP, 2020) have made public statements declaring racism as a public health concern. Both are in lockstep with the current political movement to course-correct healthcare inequality and social injustice in the US. The AANP recognized that George Floyd’s death represented many senseless deaths of Black people in the United States by law enforcement. But one man did not kill Mr. Floyd. Micro-aggressions did. Hate did. Privilege did. Systemic Racism did. It is time for change at the macrosystemic and microsystemic levels. The United States has a long history of inequality in healthcare. Addressing racism and practicing culture humility can act as part of a larger mitigation strategy. It is not enough to mandate culture competency in healthcare. Doctors and nurses must see patients as they wish to be seen not as they see them.

Currently, We are Living with Two Pandemics: Racism and COVID-19

The COVID-19 pandemic shed a spotlight on health disparities in the US. African Americans are 14% of the United States population yet comprise 34% of COVID-19 cases. Healthcare must learn to examine chronic disease states in a holistic manner. Chronic disease coupled with race AND food deserts, lack of school lunch programs, lack of safe neighborhoods, and lack of access to quality healthcare must be considered when assessing disease states in African American patients.

Are We All in This Together?

Remember at the beginning of the pandemic the saying “We are all in this together.” We must adopt this same mantra with racism in healthcare as well. It is time to unmask racism. It is time to dismantle structures and systems that perpetuate inequalities. Today, we move about our environments with our masks on while living with COVID-19. As the pandemic lingers, many people report quarantine fatigue. They are tired of wearing a mask. Some see it as a burden. But, has anyone considered the burden that lay upon Black people in America for 400 years? It is time to unmask racism so all can live a healthier America.

REFERENCES

3 Things Patients Want from Nurses (But Won't Tell Them)

Prejudice and patient choice: an insidious confluence in medicine

The Impact of Racist Patients

Credentials Don’t Shield Doctors, Nurses from Bias

Specializes in Ortho, CMSRN.

I saw it first hand when I was a tech while in nursing school. I've had more than one black nurse ask me to join them in a room so that I can witness a patient's behavior in case the patient decided to report them. The same floor also had a manager that came down hard on nurses based off of patient reports... the nurses that were disciplined were often black. This was not a floor that I ever wanted to work on. Management was terrible. I've also followed a wonderful nurse who is from Africa whose patient confided in me that they didn't like that nurse because they didn't understand her accent. Really?! If I could choose a nurse to take care of my mom, it would be her and you don't like her accent. Bleah. Yes, old white people are racist to black nurses. I will not capitulate to that nonsense if I happen to be charge that day though.

Specializes in PACU.

Racism exists in nursing, without a doubt. Yes there black nurse managers, educators and directors, however it varies depending on the location. I believe there is equal opportunity for everyone. Have I been turned down for a position because of my color? I sure have and I am white! Lost position to the Asian candidate in order to make the company more diverse. Not my fault I am White. Racism goes both ways. But ageism? Let’s talk about ageism. Nurses over 50 have a much lesser chance of being offered positions because, I guess, I demand more compensation. Or is it the company is fearful of me using more insurance benefits? Possibly. But that again is it illegal. Sure I could mention in an interview that I wouldn’t need benefits but just getting to an interview is the hard part.

11 hours ago, greener22 said:

Racism exists in nursing, without a doubt. Yes there black nurse managers, educators and directors, however it varies depending on the location. I believe there is equal opportunity for everyone. Have I been turned down for a position because of my color? I sure have and I am white! Lost position to the Asian candidate in order to make the company more diverse. Not my fault I am White. Racism goes both ways. But ageism? Let’s talk about ageism. Nurses over 50 have a much lesser chance of being offered positions because, I guess, I demand more compensation. Or is it the company is fearful of me using more insurance benefits? Possibly. But that again is it illegal. Sure I could mention in an interview that I wouldn’t need benefits but just getting to an interview is the hard part.

I tried to bring up my own experience with ageism- trying hard to relate to those who feel the world is biased against them- and was pretty much told that nothing matters except the BLM racism issue. My own rejections and mistreatment because I am over 50 were nothing compared to that. I have decided to never, ever, ever discuss racism in any forum again. Be forewarned. You may face some radical hostiles because of your post. But I do hear you. It hurts to be rejected for any reason that is not a BFOQ (bona fide occupational qualification).

Specializes in Med Surg, Tele, Geriatrics, home infusion.
16 hours ago, greener22 said:

Racism exists in nursing, without a doubt. Yes there black nurse managers, educators and directors, however it varies depending on the location. I believe there is equal opportunity for everyone. Have I been turned down for a position because of my color? I sure have and I am white! Lost position to the Asian candidate in order to make the company more diverse. Not my fault I am White. Racism goes both ways. But ageism? Let’s talk about ageism. Nurses over 50 have a much lesser chance of being offered positions because, I guess, I demand more compensation. Or is it the company is fearful of me using more insurance benefits? Possibly. But that again is it illegal. Sure I could mention in an interview that I wouldn’t need benefits but just getting to an interview is the hard part.

Proving discrimination is almost impossible. They don't have to explain why they didn't pick some one. In my opinion people pick applicants who they get a good feeling about, often that means they remind them of themselves. Applicants who are different from the person doing the interview may be very qualified, but they may unconsciously be biased against them.

Affirmative action says off all the qualified people you have to pick a candidate you ordinarily wouldn't.

And I think that should include older hires and second career hires who ordinarily might not be considered because they might have baggage or have less years to give to the company

I think of it as mandatory osmosis on our country's journey to homeostasis ☺️.