Dr. Shannon Westin, Dr. Abby Rosenberg, and Dr. Reshma Jagsi discuss the timely issue of diversity, equity, and inclusion in the field of oncology. TRANSCRIPT [MUSIC PLAYING] SHANNON WESTIN: Hey, everyone and welcome to JCO After Hours, the podcast that gets a little bit more in-depth about some of the articles and amazing research that have been published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. I'm so excited to be with you today. And more importantly, I'm very excited to talk about this amazing manuscript, which is called "Picture a Professional-- Rethinking Expectations of Medical Professionalism Through the Lens of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion." And this was a Comments and Controversies article that was just published in October of 2021. And I am beyond thrilled to be joined by Dr. Abby Rosenberg, who was the lead author on this manuscript. And she is currently an associate professor in the Division of Hematology-Oncology, as well as in the Division of Bioethics and Palliative Care at the University of Washington School of Medicine. She has a number of different amazing accomplishments, including being the director of Palliative Care and Resilience Lab at the Seattle Children's Research Institute, the director of Pediatrics at the UW Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence, and the director of Survivorship and Outcomes Research in Pediatric Oncology at the University of Washington. In addition, she is our ASCO chair of our Ethics Committee. Welcome, Dr. Rosenberg. So excited to have you. ABBY ROSENBERG: Thanks for having me. Happy to be here. SHANNON WESTIN: And in addition to Dr. Rosenberg, we're also joined by one of her co-authors, Dr. Reshma Jagsi, who is the deputy chair of radiation oncology, the Newman Family Professor of Radiation Oncology, and the residency program director and the director of the Center for Bioethics and Social Sciences at the University of Michigan. You guys, we're going to spend this whole podcast just talking about how amazing the two of you are. Thank you so much for being here. RESHMA JAGSI: Thanks for having me. SHANNON WESTIN: So let's get into it. I'm really excited about this paper. I think it's super timely and certainly something that we've all been, I think, dealing with on a day-to-day basis and also reading about and really trying to get better at. So can you tell us a little bit-- and we'll start with you, Dr. Rosenberg-- about what first drew you to this work, how you got involved and, really, how you became passionate about it? ABBY ROSENBERG: Yeah, happy to. I think just, as you said, Dr. Westin, there is this ubiquity in the experiences, in particular of women and folks of color in medicine, where we feel discriminated against, and we feel like we don't belong. And we know from some really great data from the National Academies of Sciences that 50% of women in med school, for example, experience discrimination before they graduate. And when we educate them about what microaggressive and sexist behaviors can actually look like, that number goes way up. And most women, in particular, say that they're willing to, quote, "pay this price" for being in medicine because they believe in the work, and they believe in the mission. And for me, this was really personal. Because I was one of those people, too, until I got to the point in my career where I noticed how my mentees and people who reported to me were being held back. And that, to me, made me feel like there was something I really needed to do now as an advocate and mentor to try to change the system so that more women and people of color could be successful in our field. SHANNON WESTIN: That's great. And then how did you get involved Dr. Jagsi? I'd love to know how the collaboration came about and also about your passion for this work. RESHMA JAGSI: Thank you. Yes, so both Dr. Rosenberg and I have had the privilege of chairing ASCO's Ethics Committee. And I think, to both of us, this is a fundamental matter of professional ethics. And there's really two reasons that this is so centrally and fundamentally an ethical issue. And so one of them is that human beings have a duty to resect the dignity of other human beings. And this is a situation in which we are not treating one another with due dignity. And then, of course, there's also really important consequences when we do fail in that duty. And so it's important because we share a professional mission here to promote the highest quality of patient care, to educate those who are following in our field, and to do the scholarly research to discover advances that will ultimately benefit patients and society in the future. And all of those missions are enriched when we have a diverse workforce. So this is really squarely in the lane of ethics. And so when Dr. Rosenberg proposed this article, I was just more than delighted to be included in this work. SHANNON WESTIN: And it's so important for us, as women. And I am not a woman of color, but especially as we cross all of these different groups to really elevate each other and to move the message and put it out there and make sure that people feel OK bringing these things up and understand that they're not alone, I think that's, to me, that resonated so much, with both of you saying this. Like, we've all experienced this and some of us don't even know we're experiencing it, right? Because it's just, oh, this is the way it's always been. This is the price you pay. It's the price of doing business. And I'm so grateful for people like you all that are kind of not afraid to step up and step out so that our trainees, and even pre-trainees-- people that are considering coming into the practice of medicine-- will know that this is a safe space. Because I think that's the issue, right? So I'm so grateful to you. I think, for me, it's been very interesting across these last few years, especially in the idea around #MeToo, which I know was not a new idea but certainly became very much a focus over the last three or four years. This focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion has really become, I think, a welcome change amongst a number of professions. Can you speak a little bit-- and I'd be interested on both your takes, and feel free to interact-- but can you guys speak on why we've been slow to take this on in medicine? Is it just that kind of-- gosh, I'm going to offend some people-- old, white male kind of leading the way and keeping us from doing this? Or what's been the hold-up here? Nobody wants to-- they're like, whoa, Shannon. Whoa, Shannon. RESHMA JAGSI: I have some thoughts if you want me to go. I'm yielding to you because this is really your thing. ABBY ROSENBERG: No, you go. RESHMA JAGSI: This might be a landmine, so let me go first. [LAUGHTER] No, it's totally fine. Because I think that there are very good reasons that medicine has been a conservative profession, that we've had strict hierarchies. It makes sense. You're in the operating room, you really want one person to be in charge. You need a captain of the ship. There's a lot of reasons that many of our traditions sprang up the way that they did. But they have made us a field within which individuals rise to positions of leadership. There's relatively little turnover. We've not embraced, for example, term limits in the way that many other academic fields have. And so there has been this tendency for people who have certain shared lived experiences to be able to react to the things that they've experienced but perhaps not to have as much familiarity with those things that they haven't experienced. And so I think that's one of the challenges that we have. SHANNON WESTIN: Dr. Rosenberg, do you have anything to touch on or add there? ABBY ROSENBERG: I totally agree. And thanks for launching that grenade for us. [INAUDIBLE]. [LAUGHTER] I think that change is hard, and change takes a lot of time. I'll share sort of a minor anecdote, but bear with me. When I started to really try to speak about this publicly and move the needle, my father was very ill. And he actually died during the year that I started this own crusade at my workplace. And my father had been this big civil rights activist back in his day. And I was talking to a colleague who said, oh, your dad would be so proud of you. And he said, what do you think your dad would say? And I said, you know what my dad would say is how silly it is that I thought I could make this dramatic change within a matter of months. Because it takes years and years and years to really do that. And I think where we are in academic medicine is years behind everybody else. And we're watching this change happen and this culture change happen in other industries, and we're trying to catch up. But within our own culture, it just takes a lot of time. Because there is this real institutionalized history, as Dr. Jagsi was describing, of the way we've always done it. I will also name, to just be even more provocative, that the people who have the power of influence, the people who have the power to really make those changes, are the very people who I think wrongly perceive it as a loss of their power to diversify and change the way we do it. And that's really threatening to people who can make those changes with us. And so the additional barriers we have as a grassroots community that's trying to make change becomes really hard when it's not ubiquitous from the bottom up and the top down that people are trying to be change makers themselves. SHANNON WESTIN: I think that's a great point. And I guess that kind of leads to my next question. How do we overcome this? How do we help those people in power understand what the benefits are to focusing on diversity, equity, and inclusion? And also, how do we overcome that existing bias in medicine that is affecting not only our professionalism standards but also, frankly, the care of our patients? We know that this is a clear indicator of poor outcomes