Abstract

The goal of this guidance is to provide recommendations and suggestions that encourage fairness, equity, consistency, and clarity in use and reporting of race and ethnicity in medical and science journals.As previously summarized, "terminology, usage, and word choice are critically important, especially when describing people and when discussing race and ethnicity.Inclusive language supports diversity and conveys respect.Language that imparts bias toward or against persons or groups based on characteristics or demographics must be avoided." 1 With the publication of an earlier version of this guidance, 1 comments were invited, and helpful assessments and comments were received from numerous reviewers, scholars, and researchers, who provided valuable feedback and represented diverse expertise and opinions.After thorough review of these comments (some of which did not agree with others) and additional research and discussion, the guidance was revised and updated, and additional formal review was obtained.In this Editorial, we present the updated guidance, and we sincerely thank the many reviewers for their contributions, each of whom are listed in the Acknowledgment at the end of this article.This guidance continues to acknowledge that race and ethnicity are social constructs as well as the important sensitivities and controversies related to use of these terms and associated nomenclature in medical and health research, education, and practice.Thus, for content published in medical journals, language and terminology must be accurate, clear, and precise, and must reflect fairness, equity, and consistency in use and reporting of race and ethnicity.The guidance also acknowledges that the reporting of race and ethnicity should not be considered in isolation and should be accompanied by reporting of other sociodemographic factors and social determinants, including concerns about racism, disparities, and inequities, and the intersectionality of race and ethnicity with these other factors.The guidance defines commonly used terms associated with race and ethnicity and acknowledges that these terms and definitions have changed, that some are out of date, and that the nomenclature will continue to evolve.Other topics addressed include relevant concerns and controversies in health care and research, including the intersectionality of ancestry and heritage, social determinants of health, and other socioeconomic, structural, institutional, cultural, and demographic factors; reporting of race and ethnicity in research articles; use of racial and ethnic collective or umbrella terms, capitalization, and abbreviations; listing racial and ethnic categories in alphabetical order vs order by majority; adjectival vs noun usage for categories of race and ethnicity; geo-

Keywords

MedicineRace (biology)Ethnic groupFamily medicineMedical educationGender studiesAnthropology

MeSH Terms

Biomedical ResearchEditorial PoliciesEthnicityHumansPeriodicals as TopicRacial GroupsTerminology as Topic

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2021
Type
editorial
Volume
326
Issue
7
Pages
621-621
Citations
1424
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1424
OpenAlex
19
Influential
1291
CrossRef

Cite This

Annette Flanagin, Tracy Frey, Stacy Christiansen (2021). Updated Guidance on the Reporting of Race and Ethnicity in Medical and Science Journals. JAMA , 326 (7) , 621-621. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2021.13304

Identifiers

DOI
10.1001/jama.2021.13304
PMID
34402850

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%