Discrimination and Ethnic Bias

Participants felt they had to be flawless to receive the same respect as white British colleagues. Discrimination reduced participants' ability to speak up through formal and informal mechanisms. Accent and communication style affected whe…

1 sources - 4 claims

Participants felt they had to be flawless to receive the same respect as white British colleagues. Discrimination reduced participants' ability to speak up through formal and informal mechanisms. Accent and communication style affected whether participants were perceived as credible. Microaggressions contributed to exclusion and included stereotyping, social avoidance, removal from patient interactions, and second-guessing of clinical judgement.