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Origins of Racial and Ethnic Bias in Pulmonary Technologies

Michael W. Sjoding, Sardar Ansari, Thomas S. Valley

2022Annual Review of Medicine16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Understanding how biases originate in medical technologies and developing safeguards to identify, mitigate, and remove their harms are essential to ensuring equal performance in all individuals. Drawing upon examples from pulmonary medicine, this article describes how bias can be introduced in the physical aspects of the technology design, via unrepresentative data, or by conflation of biological with social determinants of health. It then can be perpetuated by inadequate evaluation and regulatory standards. Research demonstrates that pulse oximeters perform differently depending on patient race and ethnicity. Pulmonary function testing and algorithms used to predict healthcare needs are two additional examples of medical technologies with racial and ethnic biases that may perpetuate health disparities.

Topics & Concepts

ConflationEthnic groupRace (biology)Health careHealth equityFunction (biology)MedicineHealth technologyInternet privacyPublic relationsPolitical scienceComputer scienceSociologyLawEpistemologyGender studiesPhilosophyBiologyEvolutionary biologyChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) ResearchHealthcare Policy and ManagementFood Security and Health in Diverse Populations
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