Yes, you give them the list and say "What is your race/ethnicity, you may select at least one and as many as you wish." They answer. You are done.
> What race is someone who's Arab?
Whatever they answer (Middle East or Northern African [MENA], under the 2024 revision to the categories, intuitively seems most likely.)
> What about someone who could look black with one haircut but white with another?
Again, whatever they answer.
> What about half-Arab, half-Euro?
Again, whatever they answer. Though the most obvious guess of what they might answer, given the premise, would be one of White, MENA, or both.
The part to question is not, "is it quick and free to determine race" but "does race carry useful information that helps the doctor treat the patient", which is a much thornier question.
> Yes, you give them the list and say "What is your race/ethnicity, you may select at least one and as many as you wish." They answer. You are done.
While I broadly agree with you, there have been notable controversies around people who self-identified as having a particular ancestry [0] that didn't match how other people classified them.
Yes, you give them the list and say "What is your race/ethnicity, you may select at least one and as many as you wish." They answer. You are done.
> What race is someone who's Arab?
Whatever they answer (Middle East or Northern African [MENA], under the 2024 revision to the categories, intuitively seems most likely.)
> What about someone who could look black with one haircut but white with another?
Again, whatever they answer.
> What about half-Arab, half-Euro?
Again, whatever they answer. Though the most obvious guess of what they might answer, given the premise, would be one of White, MENA, or both.
The part to question is not, "is it quick and free to determine race" but "does race carry useful information that helps the doctor treat the patient", which is a much thornier question.