New Black health-care provider directory aims to improve access to doctors for Black Canadians
CBC
A new directory of Black health-care professionals across Canada launched Thursday, and creators of the database say its goal is to help improve access to practitioners for Black Canadians who often struggle to find providers who understand their backgrounds.
The directory was created by the Black Healthcare Professionals Network, an organization founded in 2021 to advance the careers of Black professionals working in healthcare and engage in advocacy.
Dr. Nikolai Whyte, the network's co-founder and managing director, says the organization wanted to launch the directory not only too increase access to providers, but to build a network between professionals.
"It helps to create an ecosystem within the Black healthcare space where other providers can find each other and start to collaborate," said Whyte, who works as a family doctor.
Health-care providers voluntarily sign up for the directory and are vetted to ensure their licences are in good standing, the network says. The goal is for the directory to include doctors, nurses, pharmacists, dentists, psychotherapists, dietitians, massage therapists and other practitioners.
The contact information of each provider is on the website, and patients can contact them directly, a news release for the directory says.
Whyte says the directory is especially important in light of research showing that for Black people, health care outcomes can be dependent on the race of both the provider and the patient. The network points to research published by the Association of American Medical Colleges that indicates Black patient experiences improved with doctors of the same race. Pairing Black patients with doctors who are also Black helps to combat medical racism that has sometimes occurred when Black people are treated by white providers, according to the research.
One study in particular, led by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine, found that in a survey of 1,300 Black men in California, patients assigned to a Black doctor were more likely to bring up specific health concerns that they were not speaking about with other doctors.
Researchers suggested the patients may have been more comfortable opening up to Black physicians as they were made to feel more "at ease".
In Toronto, one community health centre focused on Black residents in Scarborough found similar benefits starting in 2013. A pilot project at the TAIBU Centre aimed to increase cancer screenings through culturally sensitive materials featuring diverse staff, pamphlets in multiple languages and providers who were Black. The centre said it was able to boost its screenings from 2013 to 2018 due to the program, doctors said in a 2021 paper on their findings.
Doctors who led the study told CBC News in 2021 that they hoped their methods could be used as a blueprint to increase screenings in diverse communities, who tend to be underscreened for cancer.
Paul Bailey, the executive director of the Black Health Alliance, a Toronto-based charity that aims to improve the health of Black communities, said patients sometimes struggle to find clinicians that understand their needs.
"We often get several reach outs a week, just to our general inbox, looking for Black physicians, and that's coming from folks who are across the country," said Bailey, who is not connected to the registry.
He said the directory is a "good opportunity to try and provide a space where clients, patients and other providers can find clinicians."