Addressing Medical Racism Through Interdisciplinary Collaboration
The Eliminating Quantitative Unfairness in Treatment Algorithms (EQUITA) Coalition Framework is a structured approach for healthcare organizations to eliminate race-based clinical practices. Healthcare organizations face significant barriers when attempting such changes, including institutional inertia, resource limitations, lack of internal expertise, discomfort with acknowledging medical racism, and the cross-functional nature of required changes.
Theoretical Foundation
The EQUITA framework integrates three theoretical disciplines: critical race theory provides a foundational understanding of systemic racism; organizational change management offers strategies for institutional transformation; and implementation science guides evidence-based practice adoption. Successful healthcare change requires both executing technical implementation and managing human factors, necessitating this interdisciplinary approach.
Framework Structure
The EQUITA framework identifies four critical stakeholder categories.
- Conveners create shared mission and strategy
- Institutional partners may include hospitals, health departments, academic medical centers, laboratories, payers, and professional societies
- Champions are key individuals empowered by leadership to coordinate interdisciplinary implementation work
- Subject matter experts provide deep knowledge of methodology and literature.
Strategic Planning and Implementation Process
The framework guides organizations through systematic goal-setting by assessing external forces like market conditions and professional society statements; organizational commitment and capacity; partner goals; available financial, human, and data resources; and the revision stage of specific clinical tools.
This comprehensive assessment enables coalitions to develop targeted strategies for different institutional partners and specific clinical tools, moving beyond one-size-fits-all approaches to systematic, scalable change in healthcare practice.

