Distrust in healthcare system deters blood donation among African Americans

Disparities in healthcare between races exist in the United States. A new study published in the journal Transfusion explores why African Americans donate blood at lower rates than whites. The findings reveal that there is a significant distrust in the healthcare system among the African American community, and African Americans who distrust hospitals are less likely to donate.

Led by Beth H. Shaz, MD, Chief Medical Officer of the New York Blood Center in New York, New York, researchers created a survey to explore reasons for low likelihood of blood donation in African Americans. Fifteen African American churches in metropolitan Atlanta participated in an 81-item self-administered survey, with 930 people responding to the survey.

The study's results demonstrate that about 1 in 5 African American individuals (17 percent) do not trust hospitals. This lack of trust was positively correlated with not donating blood even compared against other risk factors. Lack of trust in hospitals was also associated with not wanting to participate in research and less knowledge about the blood supply.

Respondents who did trust hospitals had more knowledge of the blood supply, less fear of donation, and were more likely to respond to blood needs of the community.

"Blood centers and hospitals need to build trust with the African American community," Shaz notes. "Increased trust will result in increased blood donor rates, increased participation in research, and increased medical knowledge."

Comments

  1. JEROMEQUIGLEY JEROMEQUIGLEY United States says:

    1) the group she did the survey on was very very controlled group.
    2) the Dr has no real street smarts, no a put down just a honest statement. For if she did she would of known that if she went by any plasma center that pays you for plasma she would find that the majority of donors (paid donors) were black. And having 1st hand knowledge of the kind of staff they have there I would not let them put a needle into my pants to be repaired much less my arm!! It is a truely scary sight to watch those people at work. Of course not all of them just a good deal of them.

    So if it is a trust issue, this throws a big wrench into her theory!! Because if you can trust those people why would you not trust better trained people at a hospital or blood bank. It seems to me the bigger conclusion she would of come to had she known more than what books tell her is, why do they only do it if they are getting paid????

    So to me her work is incomplete and worthless as to coming up with some magical answer! Sorry dr but you did a very poor job of researching this before trying to come to a conclusion!!! Better luck next time!!

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