Khandideh Williams

Khandideh Williams
  • PhD Candidate at McGill University

About

9
Publications
360
Reads
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28
Citations
Current institution
McGill University
Current position
  • PhD Candidate

Publications

Publications (9)
Article
Full-text available
Background Racism has been shown to impact the health of Black persons through its influence on health care, including its expression through implicit biases in provider training, attitudes, and behaviours. Less is known about the experiences of racism in contexts outside of the USA, and how race and racism interact with other social locations and...
Article
Race dialogues, conversations about race and racism among individuals holding different racial identities, have been proposed as one component of addressing racism in medicine and improving the experience of racially minoritized patients. Drawing on work from several fields, we aimed to assess the scope of the literature on race dialogues and to de...
Article
Full-text available
Objectives: A growing body of evidence points to persistent health inequities within racialized minority communities, and the effects of racial discrimination on health outcomes and health care experiences. While much work has considered how anti-Black racism operates at the interpersonal and institutional levels, limited attention has focused on...
Article
Full-text available
Anti-Black racism persists in various Canadian areas, including healthcare. The legacy of white dominance from the period of colonization and slavery has spawned an afterlife of anti-Black racism, which has significantly contributed to shortcomings in Canadian healthcare equity. The underfunding of research specifically examining the experiences of...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, efforts to decrease risk of viral transmission triggered an abrupt shift from ambulatory health care delivery toward telemedicine. In this study, we explore the perceptions and experiences of telemedicine among socially vulnerable households and suggest strategies to increase equity in telemedicine acces...
Article
Background: Limited evidence indicates greater female-to-male (F-M) transmission of genital infection with human papillomavirus (HPV) relative to male-to-female (M-F). We verified the hypothesis of a differential transmission rate in couple-based studies by conducting a systematic review and meta-analysis. Methods: We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, S...

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