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N/A N=22 Randomized Double-blind Other

Targeting Bias to Reduce Disparities in End of Life Care

Terminal Illness · Critical Illness

Enrolled (actual)
22
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Feb 2026
Primary outcome: Primary: Verbal Dominance — 2.65; 2.57; 2.10; 1.74 ratio — p=0.34

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
N/A
Interventions
Communication and Bias Mitigation Training (Behavioral); Communication skills training (Behavioral)
Age
Adult, Older Adult · 18+ yrs
Sex
All
Sponsor
Montefiore Medical Center
Primary completion
Nov 2024

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Verbal Dominance
2.65; 2.57; 2.10; 1.74 0.34
SECONDARY
Encounter Duration
16.13; 17.55; 13.64; 16.00 0.27
SECONDARY
Verbal Communication
7.5; 7.9; 6.0; 7.0 0.23
SECONDARY
Modified NAAS Score
SECONDARY
Physician Talk Time
0.65; 0.66; 0.55; 0.55 0.60
SECONDARY
Pauses
0.21; 0.25; 0.53; 0.38 0.24
SECONDARY
Simultaneous Speech
0.21; 0.25; 0.53; 0.38 0.61
SECONDARY
Number of Interruptions
0.04; 0; 0.02; 0.04 0.11
SECONDARY
Smiling
0.01; 0.15; 0.01; 0.09 0.58
SECONDARY
Laughing
0; 0.02; 0.04; 0.04 0.57
SECONDARY
Gesturing
3.87; 3.93; 2.84; 2.22 0.76
SECONDARY
Nodding
2.68; 2.15; 2.53; 2.36 0.29
SECONDARY
Eye Contact
0.005; 0.007; 0.014; 0.010 0.60

Summary

This study aims to determine the ways in which clinician implicit racial biases affect clinician communication with family members of patients near the end of life and to test a novel physician training intervention to reduce the effects of implicit racial bias on quality of communication. Phase 1: A sample of 50 physicians who care for seriously ill patients, including oncologists, critical care physicians and hospital-based internists will participate in a simulated clinical encounter with a Black standardized family member (actor) of a hypothetical case patient. Measures of implicit and explicit bias will be correlated with verbal and nonverbal communication behavior. Phase 2: This is a 2-arm randomized feasibility pilot of an intervention to mitigate the effects of clinician implicit bias on communication behavior. Physicians who treat patients with serious illness including oncologists, critical care physicians and hospital-based internists will be recruited to participate in a communication training session to reduce the effects of implicit bias or a control training session focusing only on communication skills. Their communication behavior will be videotaped during a simulated encounter with a Black standardized family member (actor) of a hypothetical patient with serious illness before and after the training sessions. The communication behavior before and after the training session will be compared between physicians that received the communication skills only intervention versus the physicians that received the communication skills and bias mitigation training. The primary hypothesis is that physicians who receive both the communication skills and the bias mitigation training will have greater improvements in communication skills with the Black standardized caregiver (actor) compared with those who receive only the communication skills training. This registration is inclusive of phase 2 only as phase 2 is the clinical trial portion of this research. Phase 1 is not a clinical trial as it was an observational study that did not include an intervention. Phase 1 data was used to inform the structure and analysis of phase 2.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Practicing physicians
  • Specializes in oncology, critical care, hospitalist medicine, emergency medicine or geriatrics

Exclusion Criteria

  • Physicians who do not care for seriously ill patients in the hospital at least 10% of their working time.
  • Physicians trained in Hospice and Palliative Medicine.
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05165888). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.

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