Racism in German healthcare: uncovering the construction and silencing of the “other”

While the impact of racism on healthcare interactions has been researched extensively in many parts of the world, substantive studies on healthcare-related racism in Europe, and particularly in Germany, remain scarce. This paper builds on a study that applies Community-Based Participatory Research (...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tanja Gangarova, Melike Yildiz, Lina Kabangu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-01-01
Series:Frontiers in Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1485933/full
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841556764600827904
author Tanja Gangarova
Melike Yildiz
Lina Kabangu
author_facet Tanja Gangarova
Melike Yildiz
Lina Kabangu
author_sort Tanja Gangarova
collection DOAJ
description While the impact of racism on healthcare interactions has been researched extensively in many parts of the world, substantive studies on healthcare-related racism in Europe, and particularly in Germany, remain scarce. This paper builds on a study that applies Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) and aims to explore healthcare users’ experiences of racism within German healthcare. Community members were trained as peer researchers and given support as they conducted a total of six focus group discussions that involved a total of 14 study participants: these participants were organized into two subsamples of seven participants each (subsample one: Black, African, Afro-diasporic healthcare users; subsample two: healthcare users perceived or self-describing as Muslim), and each subsample had three focus group discussions. A democratic approach to qualitative data analysis was applied in the form of the DEPICT model. The data analysis developed iteratively, with inductive and deductive steps complementing one another. The study results illustrate how the collaboratively developed concepts of being treated as “other” and being made inaudible can advance our understanding of the forms, dynamics, and effects of racism in healthcare encounters. Because this paper focuses on the process of racialization, it helps illumine the mechanisms of subtle racism, which, as study results suggest, can damage healthcare users, cause a loss of trust in the system, and lead to invisibilization of racism in healthcare. By doing so, it draws attention to areas for change and transformation, to larger power structures that must be challenged in order to ensure responsive and equal healthcare for all healthcare users. The application of CBPR and, particularly, the engagement of racialized healthcare users in the research process offered pathways for analyzing the subtle, otherwise hard-to-detect mechanisms of racism, and for learning from the wisdom of situated knowledges.
format Article
id doaj-art-ff6b2ac00d9a48cf8ea798332d9c60d1
institution Kabale University
issn 2296-2565
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Frontiers in Public Health
spelling doaj-art-ff6b2ac00d9a48cf8ea798332d9c60d12025-01-07T06:43:24ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Public Health2296-25652025-01-011210.3389/fpubh.2024.14859331485933Racism in German healthcare: uncovering the construction and silencing of the “other”Tanja Gangarova0Melike Yildiz1Lina Kabangu2National Discrimination and Racism Monitor (NaDiRa), German Center for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM), Berlin, GermanyFamilia+Migra Network, Berlin, GermanyCSE Caritas, Essen, GermanyWhile the impact of racism on healthcare interactions has been researched extensively in many parts of the world, substantive studies on healthcare-related racism in Europe, and particularly in Germany, remain scarce. This paper builds on a study that applies Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) and aims to explore healthcare users’ experiences of racism within German healthcare. Community members were trained as peer researchers and given support as they conducted a total of six focus group discussions that involved a total of 14 study participants: these participants were organized into two subsamples of seven participants each (subsample one: Black, African, Afro-diasporic healthcare users; subsample two: healthcare users perceived or self-describing as Muslim), and each subsample had three focus group discussions. A democratic approach to qualitative data analysis was applied in the form of the DEPICT model. The data analysis developed iteratively, with inductive and deductive steps complementing one another. The study results illustrate how the collaboratively developed concepts of being treated as “other” and being made inaudible can advance our understanding of the forms, dynamics, and effects of racism in healthcare encounters. Because this paper focuses on the process of racialization, it helps illumine the mechanisms of subtle racism, which, as study results suggest, can damage healthcare users, cause a loss of trust in the system, and lead to invisibilization of racism in healthcare. By doing so, it draws attention to areas for change and transformation, to larger power structures that must be challenged in order to ensure responsive and equal healthcare for all healthcare users. The application of CBPR and, particularly, the engagement of racialized healthcare users in the research process offered pathways for analyzing the subtle, otherwise hard-to-detect mechanisms of racism, and for learning from the wisdom of situated knowledges.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1485933/fullracismotheringsilencingCBPRhealthcareGermany
spellingShingle Tanja Gangarova
Melike Yildiz
Lina Kabangu
Racism in German healthcare: uncovering the construction and silencing of the “other”
Frontiers in Public Health
racism
othering
silencing
CBPR
healthcare
Germany
title Racism in German healthcare: uncovering the construction and silencing of the “other”
title_full Racism in German healthcare: uncovering the construction and silencing of the “other”
title_fullStr Racism in German healthcare: uncovering the construction and silencing of the “other”
title_full_unstemmed Racism in German healthcare: uncovering the construction and silencing of the “other”
title_short Racism in German healthcare: uncovering the construction and silencing of the “other”
title_sort racism in german healthcare uncovering the construction and silencing of the other
topic racism
othering
silencing
CBPR
healthcare
Germany
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1485933/full
work_keys_str_mv AT tanjagangarova racismingermanhealthcareuncoveringtheconstructionandsilencingoftheother
AT melikeyildiz racismingermanhealthcareuncoveringtheconstructionandsilencingoftheother
AT linakabangu racismingermanhealthcareuncoveringtheconstructionandsilencingoftheother