Safeguarding of Vulnerable Adults (SOVA) Level 2 (VTQ)

48 videos, 2 hours and 6 minutes

Course Content

Unconscious Bias

Video 40 of 48
2 min 4 sec
English
English
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Understanding Unconscious Bias in Health and Social Care

Unconscious bias refers to the unintentional preferences or assumptions we hold about others, often influenced by past experiences, social conditioning, or cultural exposure. While these biases are a natural part of human psychology, they can have a significant impact in professional environments—particularly in health and social care settings.

How Unconscious Bias Manifests

Many people associate bias with obvious traits such as race, gender, or age. However, unconscious bias can also arise from subtler characteristics, including:

  • Height and weight
  • Accent, dialect, or language proficiency
  • Marital or parental status
  • Introversion or extroversion
  • Personal preferences (e.g., tea vs coffee)
  • Style of dress or perceived confidence

These factors can influence how we assign tasks, evaluate behaviour, and provide support—often without us realising.

The Impact of Bias in Safeguarding

Within a safeguarding context, unconscious bias can lead to:

  • Overlooking warning signs in certain individuals
  • Being disproportionately cautious with others
  • Inconsistent responses to concerns
  • Miscommunication with colleagues or service users

Such biases can affect the fairness and quality of care provided, potentially putting individuals at greater risk.

Addressing Unconscious Bias

It’s important to recognise that unconscious bias does not mean we are bad people. However, being aware of our assumptions allows us to challenge and manage them more effectively.

We all have a shared responsibility to ensure the individuals we support are treated with fairness, respect, and dignity—regardless of their background, identity, or behaviour.