A Person鈥檚 Race Influences Question Asking as Much as Their Stroke History

Black women - regardless of neurological insult - ask fewer questions of health care providers

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A physician sit with her hand on the shoulder of a Black female patient on a hospital bed.
Head shot of Jamila Minga
Duke speech pathologist and assistant professor Jamila Minga, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

Minga has found that some right brain stroke survivors ask fewer questions. But this new study also found that a person鈥檚 race 鈥 independent of brain injury 鈥 affects their inclination to ask questions.

The research appears on January 10 in the Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research.

While a stroke is just as likely to occur within the left or right side of the brain, research on stroke-related communication deficits has mostly focused on people who have survived a left hemisphere stroke.

鈥淭hat's largely because communication impairments after a left hemisphere stroke are more overt,鈥 said Minga, who recently joined Duke as an assistant professor in the department of head and neck surgery & communication sciences.

Instead, right hemisphere stroke survivors have what clinicians call apragmatism -- a difficulty understanding and producing language that is appropriate for different settings and situation. For example, Minga recalled the time she visited a patient鈥檚 room for a speech assessment and while his wife sat in a chair beside him, the patient asked Minga to join him in his hospital bed. He wasn鈥檛 joking or being deliberately crass.

鈥淗e could produce language. He was completely intelligible. His sentence structure, grammar and morphology were all fine,鈥 Minga said. 鈥淭he appropriateness? Not so much.鈥

It鈥檚 this subtlety in speech and social conventions that makes communication impairments so hard to pinpoint in right hemisphere stroke survivors, which leaves many undiagnosed and without assistance, Minga said.

Another found that right hemisphere stroke participants asked fewer questions when getting to know a new person, inspiring her and others to measure the quantity and quality of question asking as a potential diagnostic tool.

鈥淓veryone recognizes what a question is, no matter what language you speak,鈥 Minga said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 easily quantifiable. And questions are used to initiate, maintain and dissolve relationships. They're key to social communication.鈥

To address whether race affected a stroke survivor鈥檚 question-asking habits, Minga analyzed five-minute snippets of conversation from 32 women who had participated in and measured how many questions they asked while getting to know someone new. The participant pool consisted of an equal number of Black and White women, half of whom had sustained a right hemisphere stroke.

As Minga had found before, right hemisphere stroke participants asked fewer questions than their non-stroke counterparts no matter their race during the get-to-know-you chat with an unfamiliar person (a female speech pathology graduate student).

However, when Minga and her team analyzed the results by race, they discovered that no matter the stroke condition, Black women asked half as many questions as White participants, about 20 on average.

鈥淲hite participants without stroke had the highest frequency of question-asking, followed by White participants who had a right hemisphere stroke,鈥 Minga said. 鈥淭hen the Black participants who did not have a stroke, and the lowest numbers seen were with Black participants who had experienced a right hemisphere stroke.鈥

The results highlight how diagnosing communication impairments resulting from a right hemisphere stroke may need to be adjusted based on race.

The research team is following up on this study to see whether pairing Black participants with a Black conversation partner changes the nature of question asking. (The vast majority of speech pathologists are White; ).

Minga hopes this work motivates clinicians to consider providing more information to patients rather than assuming someone鈥檚 reservedness is due to a lack of curiosity. Especially for Black women.

鈥淔or Black women who survive a stroke, the functional consequences of a communication impairment are significant,鈥 Minga and her team write in their report. 鈥淚t can impact financial stability, child rearing and daily socializing, which are all important for good health and well-being.鈥

Support for the research came from the U.S. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (3R01-DC008524-11S1, L60 DC019755), the U.S. National Institutes of Health Office of Research on Women鈥檚 Health (2K12-HD043446-16), the U.S. National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (5U54MD012392-03), and the 老牛影视 School of Medicine.

Citation

鈥淚ntersectionality of Race and Question-Asking in Women After Right Hemisphere Brain Damage,鈥 Danai K. Fannin, Jada Elleby, Maria Tackett, Jamila Minga. Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research, Jan. 10, 2023. DOI: 10.1044/2022_JSLHR-22-00327.