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Resident’s NEJM essay discusses combating anti-Asian hate

A man holding Stop Asian Hate sign

James Lee, a first-year psychiatry resident at the University of Washington School of Medicine, was feeling anxious and overwhelmed by the increase of anti-Asian hate crimes during the pandemic. Since racism can occur anywhere, he thought it would be useful to offer guidance to healthcare providers about how to help.

His perspective, “Combating anti-Asian sentiment — a practical guide for clinicians,” was published March 24 in The New England Journal of Medicine.

“One of the consequences of suffering from this racism is fear, trauma and depression,” he said. “The way we are currently operating, we could let this fall through the cracks.”

He calls for hospitals and clinics to be more welcoming to Asian patients, and offers six tips:

Over the past 12 months, 31% of Asian American people have reported being subjected to slurs or racist jokes, 26% have feared that someone might threaten or physically attack them, and 58% believe anti-Asian racism has increased since pandemic began, according to a survey by the Pew Research Center.

Lee, a Korean American, thinks that all Asian Americans are suffering from racism right now, though many may have not experienced an outright hate crime. While many people have donated time and money toward these causes, he also asks people to consider how they could support Asian Americans in their workplace and their home.

“These small changes will allow clinicians to capture diagnoses they might otherwise miss and to connect Asian-American patients with resources essential to their well-being, thereby providing holistic care that accounts for patients’ lived experience of race,” he wrote.