[UPDATED on Nov. 14]
David Confer, a bicyclist and an audio technician, told his doctor he 鈥渦sed to be Ph.D. level鈥 during a 2019 appointment in Washington, D.C. Confer, then 50, was speaking figuratively: He was experiencing brain fog 鈥 a symptom of his liver problems. But did his doctor take him seriously? Now, after his death, Confer鈥檚 partner, Cate Cohen, doesn鈥檛 think so.
Confer, who was Black, had been diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma two years before. His prognosis was positive. But during chemotherapy, his symptoms 鈥 brain fog, vomiting, back pain 鈥 suggested trouble with his liver, and he was later diagnosed with cirrhosis. He died in 2020, unable to secure a transplant. Throughout, Cohen, now 45, felt her partner鈥檚 clinicians didn鈥檛 listen closely to him and had written him off.
That feeling crystallized once she read Confer鈥檚 records. The doctor described Confer鈥檚 fuzziness and then quoted his Ph.D. analogy. To Cohen, the language was dismissive, as if the doctor didn鈥檛 take Confer at his word. It reflected, she thought, a belief that he was likely to be noncompliant with his care 鈥 that he was a bad candidate for a liver transplant and would waste the donated organ.
For its part, MedStar Georgetown, where Confer received care, declined to comment on specific cases. But spokesperson Lisa Clough said the medical center considers a variety of factors for transplantation, including 鈥渃ompliance with medical therapy, health of both individuals, blood type, comorbidities, ability to care for themselves and be stable, and post-transplant social support system.鈥 Not all potential recipients and donors meet those criteria, Clough said.
Doctors often send signals of their appraisals of patients鈥 personas. Researchers are increasingly finding that doctors can transmit prejudice under the guise of objective descriptions. Clinicians who later read those purportedly objective descriptions can be misled and deliver substandard care.
Discrimination in health care is 鈥渢he secret, or silent, poison that taints interactions between providers and patients before, during, after the medical encounter,鈥 said Dayna Bowen Matthew, dean of George Washington University鈥檚 law school and an expert in civil rights law and disparities in health care.
Bias can be seen in the way doctors speak during rounds. Some patients, Matthew said, are described simply by their conditions. Others are characterized by terms that communicate more about their social status or character than their health and what鈥檚 needed to address their symptoms. For example, a patient could be described as an 鈥80-year-old nice Black gentleman.鈥 Doctors mention that patients look well-dressed or that someone is a laborer or homeless.
The stereotypes that can find their way into patients鈥 records sometimes help determine the level of care patients receive. Are they spoken to as equals? Will they get the best, or merely the cheapest, treatment? Bias is 鈥減ervasive鈥 and 鈥渃ausally related to inferior health outcomes, period,鈥 Matthew said.
Narrow or prejudiced thinking is simple to write down and easy to copy and paste over and over. Descriptions such as 鈥渄ifficult鈥 and 鈥渄isruptive鈥 can become hard to escape. Once so labeled, patients can experience 鈥渄ownstream effects,鈥 said Dr. , an expert in misdiagnosis who works at the Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Houston. He affects 12 million patients a year.
Conveying bias can be as simple as a pair of quotation marks. One team of researchers Black patients, in particular, were quoted in their records more frequently than other patients when physicians were characterizing their symptoms or health issues. The quotation mark patterns detected by researchers could be a sign of disrespect, used to communicate irony or sarcasm to future clinical readers. Among the types of phrases the researchers spotlighted were colloquial language or statements made in Black or ethnic slang.
鈥淏lack patients may be subject to systematic bias in physicians鈥 perceptions of their credibility,鈥 the authors of the paper wrote.
That鈥檚 just one study in an incoming tide focused on the variations in the language that clinicians use to describe patients of different races and genders. In many ways, the research is just catching up to what patients and doctors knew already, that discrimination can be conveyed and furthered by partial accounts.
Confer鈥檚 MedStar records, Cohen thought, were pockmarked with partial accounts 鈥 notes that included only a fraction of the full picture of his life and circumstances.
Cohen pointed to a write-up of a psychosocial evaluation, used to assess a patient鈥檚 readiness for a transplant. The evaluation stated that Confer drank a 12-pack of beer and perhaps as much as a pint of whiskey daily. But Confer had quit drinking after starting chemotherapy and had been only a social drinker before, Cohen said. It was 鈥渨ildly inaccurate,鈥 Cohen said.
鈥淣o matter what he did, that initial inaccurate description of the volume he consumed seemed to follow through his records,鈥 she said.
Physicians frequently see a harsh tone in referrals from other programs, said Dr. , a transplant doctor at the University of Chicago who advised Cohen but didn鈥檛 review Confer鈥檚 records. 鈥淭hey kind of blame the patient for things that happen, not really giving credit for circumstances,鈥 he said. But, he continued, those circumstances are important 鈥 looking beyond them, without bias, and at the patient himself or herself can result in successful transplants.

The History of One鈥檚 Medical History
That doctors pass private judgments on their patients has been a source of nervous humor for years. In an episode of the sitcom 鈥淪einfeld,鈥 Elaine Benes discovers that a doctor had condescendingly written that she was 鈥渄ifficult鈥 . When she asked about it, the doctor promised to erase it. But it was written in pen.
The jokes reflect long-standing conflicts between patients and doctors. In the 1970s, campaigners to open up records to patients and less stereotyping language about the people they treated.
Nevertheless, doctors鈥 notes historically have had a 鈥渟tilted vocabulary,鈥 said Dr. Leonor Fernandez, an internist and researcher at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Patients are often described as 鈥渄enying鈥 facts about their health, she said, as if they鈥檙e not reliable narrators of their conditions.
One doubting doctor鈥檚 judgment can alter the course of care for years. When she visited her doctor for kidney stones early in her life, 鈥渉e was very dismissive about it,鈥 recalled Melina Oien, who now lives in Tacoma, Washington. Afterward, when she sought care in the military health care system, providers 鈥 whom Oien presumed had read her history 鈥 assumed that her complaints were psychosomatic and that she was seeking drugs.
鈥淓very time I had an appointment in that system 鈥 there鈥檚 that tone, that feel. It creates that sense of dread,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou know the doctor has read the records and has formed an opinion of who you are, what you鈥檙e looking for.鈥
A decade and a half later, when Oien left military care in 2013, her paper records didn鈥檛 follow her. Nor did those assumptions.
New Technology 鈥 Same Biases?
While Oien could leave her problems behind, the health system鈥檚 shift to electronic medical records and the data-sharing it encourages can intensify misconceptions. It鈥檚 easier than ever to maintain stale records, rife with false impressions or misreads, and to share or duplicate them with the click of a button.
鈥淭his thing perpetuates,鈥 Singh said. When his team reviewed records of misdiagnosed cases, he found them full of identical notes. 鈥淚t gets copy-pasted without freshness of thinking,鈥 he said.
Research has found that misdiagnosis disproportionately happens to patients whom doctors have labeled as 鈥渄ifficult鈥 in their electronic health record. Singh cited a pair of studies that presented hypothetical scenarios to doctors.
In , participants reviewed two sets of notes, one in which the patient was described simply by her symptoms and a second in which descriptions of disruptive or difficult behaviors had been added. Diagnostic accuracy dropped with the difficult patients.
assessed treatment decisions and found that medical students and residents were less likely to prescribe pain medications to patients whose records included stigmatizing language.
Digital records can also display prejudice in handy formats. in JAMA discussed a small example: an unnamed digital record system that affixed an airplane logo to some patients to indicate that they were, in medical parlance, 鈥渇requent flyers.鈥 That鈥檚 a pejorative term for patients who need plenty of care or are looking for medications.
But even as tech might amplify these problems, it can also expose them. Digitized medical records are easily shared 鈥 and not merely with fellow doctors, but also with patients.
Since the 鈥90s, patients have had the right to request their records, and doctors鈥 offices can charge only reasonable fees to cover the cost of clerical work. Penalties against practices or hospitals that failed to produce records were rarely assessed 鈥 at least until the Trump administration, when , previously known as a socially conservative champion of religious freedom, took the helm of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services鈥 Office for Civil Rights.
During Severino鈥檚 tenure, the office assessed a spate of monetary fines against some practices. The complaints mostly came from higher-income people, Severino said, citing his own difficulties getting medical records. 鈥淚 can only imagine how much harder it often is for people with less means and education,鈥 he said.
Patients can now read the notes 鈥 the doctors鈥 descriptions of their conditions and treatments 鈥 because of . The bill nationalized policies that had started earlier in the decade, in Boston, because of an organization called OpenNotes.
For most patients, most of the time, opening record notes has been beneficial. 鈥淏y and large, patients wanted to have access to the notes,鈥 said Fernandez, who has helped study and roll out the program. 鈥淭hey felt more in control of their health care. They felt they understood things better.鈥 that open notes lead to increased compliance, as patients say they鈥檙e more likely to take medicines.
Conflicts Ahead?
But there鈥檚 also a darker side to opening records: if patients find something they don鈥檛 like. , focusing on some early hospital adopters, has found that slightly more than 1 in 10 patients report being offended by what they find in their notes.
And the wave of computer-driven research focusing on patterns of language has similarly found low but significant numbers of discriminatory descriptions in notes. A study published in the journal found negative descriptors in nearly 1 in 10 records. found stigmatizing language in 2.5% of records.
Patients can also compare what happened in a visit with what was recorded. They can see what was really on doctors鈥 minds.
Oien, who has become a patient advocate since moving on from the military health care system, recalled an incident in which a client fainted while getting a drug infusion 鈥 treatments for thin skin, low iron, esophageal tears, and gastrointestinal conditions 鈥 and needed to be taken to the emergency room. Afterward, the patient visited a cardiologist. The cardiologist, who hadn鈥檛 seen her previously, was 鈥渧ery verbally professional,鈥 Oien said. But what he wrote in the note 鈥 a story based on her ER visit 鈥 was very different. 鈥淣inety percent of the record was about her quote-unquote drug use,鈥 Oien said, noting that it鈥檚 rare to see the connection between a false belief about a patient and the person鈥檚 future care.
Spotting those contradictions will become easier now. 鈥淧eople are going to say, 鈥楾he doc said what?鈥欌 predicted Singh.
But many patients 鈥 even ones with wealth and social standing 鈥 may be reluctant to talk to their doctors about errors or bias. Fernandez, the OpenNotes pioneer, didn鈥檛. After one visit, she saw a physical exam listed on her record when none had occurred.
鈥淚 did not raise that to that clinician. It’s really hard to raise things like that,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou’re afraid they won’t like you and won’t take good care of you anymore.鈥
[Correction: This article was updated at 11:30 a.m. ET on Nov. 14, 2022, to accurately reflect the time Melina Oien spent in the military health care system.]