Site icon Lown Institute

“We should all have an equity lens”: Insights from hospital equity officers

Interest in diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in healthcare grew substantially in 2020 as a result of Black Lives Matter and other social justice movements. Hospitals recognized the need for an institutional focus on equity and many developed DEI offices to address this need. From 2019-2022, “Chief diversity and inclusion officer” was the fastest-growing c-suite position, Becker’s Healthcare reported.

How have hospital equity officials addressed racism within their institutions and in healthcare, and what challenges have they faced? In Health Affairs, researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard University, the American Hospitals Association, and the Commonwealth Fund surveyed 340 hospital equity officers from across the country. A smaller subset of 18 officers participated in longer qualitative interviews.

Advancements in equity

The survey results and interviews show where strides have already been taken towards health equity. Here are a few of the key takeaways on the positives:

“I think any executive needs the health equity lens. We should all have it.”

Equity officer interview participant, Health Affairs

Room for improvement

Researchers also identified obstacles to change and room for improvement:

“Fuzzy data in, fuzzy results, right? So, we have a lot of fuzzy data.”

Equity officer interview participant, Health Affairs

Where to go next?

Equity officers identified the need for certain tools and guidelines that could help advance equity at their hospital:

“What are the right clinical settings to collect [social determinants of health] data? How do we collect it in a confidential manner? When should it be collected? How often should it be collected? What do we do with the data once we have it?”

Equity officer interview participant, Health Affairs

Creating DEI positions is not a cure-all for healthcare inequities; it’s just the start. These findings provide a peek into how hospital equity leaders are making change, and how researchers and policymakers can help their work forward.

Exit mobile version