# Implicit racial bias in pediatric emergency medicine: A foundational investigation of physician behaviors

> **NIH NIH K23** · UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA · 2024 · $155,431

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
In the pediatric emergency department, children who belong to racial, ethnic, and language minority groups are
less likely to receive interventions such as antibiotics and pain medication. Importantly, minority children are
more likely to die of emergency conditions, including sepsis and cardiac arrest. Eliminating inequity requires
strategic and rigorous approaches across multiple levels. Dr. Colleen Gutman is an Assistant Professor of
Pediatric Emergency Medicine at the University of Florida. Her long-term goal is to become an independently
funded physician-scientist with a focus on investigating and implementing strategies to promote equitable,
patient-centered pediatric emergency care. Through the support of a KL2 award, Dr. Gutman gained
introductory skills in multi-center health disparities research, qualitative analysis, and health communication
science. To achieve a successful transition to research independence, Dr. Gutman and her multidisciplinary
mentorship team devised a career development plan that builds from that foundation. With this K23 award, Dr.
Gutman will develop advanced skills in 1) the identification and measurement of implicit bias, 2) the science of
patient-centered communication, 3) advanced mixed methods, 4) academic leadership, and 5) scientific
writing. The career development plan will be complemented by mentored research experiences. Using the
NIMHD Research Framework, the proposed research seeks to define elements of the physician-parent
interaction that contribute to child health disparities. The objective is to define how implicit bias affects
physician behavior in the pediatric emergency department. This is a necessary first step that will inform
targeted interventions aimed at reducing child health disparities. In Aim 1, Dr. Gutman will use a parent-
engaged modified Delphi approach to establish physician behaviors (e.g., assumptions about parent
characteristics and access to resources; communication with parents) that may mediate the relationship
between physician implicit bias and child health disparities. In Aim 2, she will collect paired questionnaires from
pediatric emergency physicians and parents. She will analyze physician-parent response concordance on
items evaluating parent characteristics and access to resources. Through this analysis, she will assess for
systematic differences in the accuracy of physician assumptions based on parent race, ethnicity, and
language. In Aim 3, she will video-record pediatric emergency department encounters to analyze the
relationship between physician communication and parent race, ethnicity, and language. Physician behaviors
that differ for minority parents may mediate the relationship between physician implicit bias and child health
disparities. The findings will inform a multicenter R01 proposal that is fully powered to conduct a mediation
analysis assessing the relative importance of the defined behaviors on patient-centered disparities out...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10906146
- **Project number:** 5K23MD018639-02
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
- **Principal Investigator:** Colleen Kays Gutman
- **Activity code:** K23 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2024
- **Award amount:** $155,431
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2023-08-11 → 2028-02-29

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10906146

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10906146, Implicit racial bias in pediatric emergency medicine: A foundational investigation of physician behaviors (5K23MD018639-02). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-25 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10906146. Licensed CC0.

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