The observation indicates that the author of the CDC’s list of COVID-19 warning signs may have assumed that readers would be White. The oversight—and others—have ignited a discussion about the role of racial bias in medicine and health care, particularly surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic.
Minority Communities Hard Hit by COVID-19
According to the APM Research Lab, COVID-19 has thus far killed one in 1,150 Latinx Americans, one in 800 Black Americans, and one in 750 Indigenous Americans. Comparatively, it has killed one in 1,325 White Americans and one in 1,925 Asian Americans.
One possible contributing factor is that some medical metrics of pulmonary health, as well as the tools designed to measure them, were developed with White rather than Black, Latinx, or Indigenous, patients in mind.
Hidden Biases in COVID-19 Symptomatology
Michael Sjoding, MD, assistant professor of internal medicine in the division of pulmonary and critical care medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School, tells Verywell that while certain COVID-19 symptoms “are the same across races,” others are more visually apparent in people of one race than in people of another.
For example, Sjoding says that lip discoloration is more “difficult to identify in darker-skinned individuals” than in lighter-skinned individuals. Instead, people with darker skin should be on the lookout for discoloration of the nails, gums, and the area around the eyes.
Sjoding also says that the healthcare system may perpetuate “false beliefs about biological differences between Black and White patients” that could negatively affect the efficacy of their treatment.
“One example of this is that the symptom of pain may be underestimated or under-treated due to a false belief that Black patients feel less pain than White patients,” Sjoding says, adding that the issue is “not specific to COVID-19.”
Hidden Biases in Medical Technology
Earlier this year, Sjoding and four colleagues conducted a study on racial bias in pulse oximetry, a medical technique for measuring blood oxygen saturation levels.
Pulse oximetry uses the transmission of light through the tissue to divine the color of the blood on the other side. If it’s bright red, the patient is sufficiently oxygenated; if it’s dark red or purplish, the patient is insufficiently oxygenated.
The results of the study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, suggest that pulse oximetry has a higher margin of error in Black patients than in White patients. Specifically, that pulse oximetry returned inaccurate results for Black patients three times as often as it did White patients—12% of the time compared to 4% of the time.
“I think doctors should be aware that in darker-skinned patients, the pulse oximeter may be reading a few points higher than their oxygen level actually is, and adjust their treatment accordingly,” Sjoding says.
Sjoding says that the racial disparity in pulse oximetry accuracy is likely related to the differing amounts of melanin, or pigment, in light and dark skin.
In the conclusion of their study, Sjoding and his co-authors wrote: “Our findings highlight an ongoing need to understand and correct racial bias in pulse oximetry and other forms of medical technology.“
Why the Difference Matters
Those few points could mean the difference between an adequate and inadequate medical response to respiratory distress. For example, pulse oximetry could indicate that a darker-skinned patient’s blood oxygen saturation levels are hovering around 92% when they are actually below 88%—the threshold for medical intervention.
“Given the widespread use of pulse oximetry for medical decision-making, these findings have some major implications, especially during the current coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic,” Sjoding and his co-authors wrote in their study. “Our results suggest that reliance on pulse oximetry to triage patients and adjust supplemental oxygen levels may place Black patients at increased risk for hypoxemia [abnormally low blood oxygen saturation levels].”
Sjoding recommends that doctors perform an arterial blood gas test—another way to measure blood oxygen saturation levels—instead of or in addition to pulse oximetry on dark-skinned patients. However, Sjoding adds that the arterial blood gas test “is much more invasive and painful” than pulse oximetry.
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