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Unconscious bias may interfere with the interpretation of research from some settings, particularly from lower-income countries. Most studies of this phenomenon have relied on indirect outcomes such as article citation counts and publication rates; few have addressed or proven the effect of unconscious bias in evidence interpretation. In this randomized, blinded crossover experiment in a sample of 347 English clinicians, we demonstrate that changing the source of a research abstract from a low- to a high-income country significantly improves how it is viewed, all else being equal. Using fixed-effects models, we measured differences in ratings for strength of evidence, relevance, and likelihood of referral to a peer. Having a high-income-country source had a significant overall impact on respondents' ratings of relevance and recommendation to a peer. Unconscious bias can have far-reaching implications for the diffusion of knowledge and innovations from low-income countries.
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Matthew Harris
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Joachim Marti
Centre universitaire de médecine générale et santé publique, Lausanne
Hillary Watt
Imperial College London
Health Affairs
Imperial College London
Fielding Graduate University
Institut de Recherche et d’Innovation
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Harris et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d76af7b1cb92dd1bb8b0b7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2017.0773