key: cord-0049142-3cqt0uq4 authors: Blankenburg, Rebecca; Poitevien, Patricia; Gonzalez del Rey, Javier; Aylor, Megan; Frohna, John; McPhillips, Heather; Waggoner-Fountain, Linda; Degnon, Laura title: Dismantling Racism: APPD's Commitment to Action date: 2020-08-27 journal: Acad Pediatr DOI: 10.1016/j.acap.2020.08.017 sha: 13b40df7a98fca4a91d45e9249ff381d3a294197 doc_id: 49142 cord_uid: 3cqt0uq4 nan The tragic deaths due to racial injustice and the disproportionate impact COVID-19 has had on communities of color have been a wake-up call that despite our efforts we have still failed to address centuries of racism in our country. Racism has led to healthcare inequities, poor health outcomes, and increased morbidity and mortality for racial and ethnic minorities. 1, 2, 3 Racism has led to underrepresentation of learners and faculty who are racial and ethnic minorities 4, 5, 6 , unsafe learning environments for our underrepresented in medicine (UIM) learners (those racial and ethnic populations that are underrepresented in the medical profession relative to their numbers in the general population) 7 , and has contributed to the leakiness of the academic pipeline for UIM individuals at all levels. 8, 9, 10 As an organization of leaders of pediatric education, the Association of Pediatric Program Directors upholds diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) as core values. We have worked hard to incorporate these values in all that we do. Still we recognize that we have fallen short and there is far more that we can do as an organization to fight structural racism. We have failed to address the lack of UIM individuals in our APPD leadership quickly enough. Only recently did we realize that we do not have certain necessary demographic information about our members, recognizing we cannot aggressively seek out diverse representation if we do not know our current demographics. As Academic Pediatrics is the official journal of the APPD, and in recognition of the journal's internal commitment to address racism in the field of pediatrics 11 , we are using this platform to share the APPD's commitment moving forward to confront racism in six areas. For each of these areas, we have developed tangible goals, timelines, and accountability, and we are committed to sharing our progress with our APPD membership quarterly. We are making a strong commitment as APPD and urging our individual residency and fellowship programs to join us in becoming anti-racist. Anti-racism is not merely the absence of being racist, but rather actively working to dismantle racism in all that we do. We are re-examining all of our activities as an organization to ensure that we are breaking down structural racism in every facet, every project, and every action team. We have re-written our mission statement to more strongly state our commitment to DEI. In addition, we are supporting our students, residents, fellows, and program leadership who advocate against racism. We are dedicated to defining what it means to be anti-racist as an organization and as individual member programs, and then holding ourselves accountable to these metrics. In this process, we will outline steps to becoming anti-racist. We will also compile and create job descriptions for a number of positions of leadership in DEI (Vice Chair of Diversity, Chief Diversity Officer, Associate Program Director dedicated to DEI, Assistant Dean for DEI) to support the hiring practices of institutions and programs. We are committed to creating educational materials to teach ourselves, our faculty, staff, residents, and fellows to be anti-racist. We had already built implicit bias, microaggression, and anti-racism training into our leadership programs (LEAD and LEAPES), and have highlighted this in annual APPD Conferences for the past four years. In addition to building curricula, we have started a monthly Confronting Racism session for our members. We are dedicated to training faculty, staff, residents, and fellows in the history of racism and structural racism and its impacts on children's health, the communities in which children live, and our learning environments. We will work with the ACGME to include anti-racism training in their core requirements for residents, fellows, and faculty development for all specialties and to require that all institutions have policies on anti-discrimination. We will also work with the ABP to include anti-racism content as core content for pediatrics certification and to develop MOC4 credit for faculty working on anti-racism actions in their home institutions. In order to improve the disproportionate attrition in academic medicine for UIM individuals, we will develop specific mentorship and sponsorship programs for UIM residency and fellowship program leaders. In addition, we will continue our Advancing Inclusiveness in Medical Education Scholars (AIMS) Program for UIM residents, to help them develop skills and further interest in medical education and academic medicine. We recognize the importance of researching the impact of structural racism on our clinical learning environments and on the retention of UIM individuals. We also recognize that interventions intended to stop the impact of racism in medical education must be studied and properly researched to ensure realization of an intended effect. APPD is committed to supporting these studies through our LEARN Research Network and Special Projects Grants. We will work with our Pediatric Educational Excellence Across the Continuum partners (AMSPDC, APA, APPD, COMSEP, and CoPS) and Federation of Pediatric Organizations (AAP, ABP, AMSPDC, APA, APPD, APS, and SPR) to support the development of UIM individuals. Recognizing that doing impactful work in DEI takes time and resources, we will work with these organizations to advocate for financial investment in DEI work, including pipeline programs, recruitment efforts, mentoring programs, and educational efforts. We will also encourage economic incentives for individuals doing DEI work to address the minority tax, which is the extra unpaid, uncompensated responsibility placed on faculty and mentors who are racial and ethnic minorities in the name of efforts to achieve diversity. 12 In addition, we are working with the Children's Hospital Association (CHA) to explore looking at quality metrics through a racial and ethnic equity lens. We are committed to ensuring race and ethnicity information is collected in as accurate a manner as possible -through specifically asking patients and parents directly. We are looking at potential inequities in care, including disproportionate involvement of security and Child Protective Service with families of color and inadequate use of interpreters. In addition, we are working with CHA to ensure hospital faculty and staff are trained in racism, implicit bias, and addressing microaggressions. We are committed to continuing to listen, learn, and add additional priority actions to dismantle racism. Sadly, the acts of violence against African Americans and the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on people of color underscore how much progress remains to be made. We must continue to fight for a just and equitable environment for all and speak out against racism and against structures that create health disparities and inequities for people of color and other marginalized individuals. As pediatricians and as educators, we are acutely aware of how our patients and our trainees struggle with these issues. As we prepare the next generation of pediatricians to provide care for our most vulnerable citizens, we must empower them to be aware, to empathize, and especially to act. 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