Title: Eliminating Health Disparities
1Eliminating Health Disparities
- Michael A. Rodriguez, MD, MPH
- Associate Professor
- David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
- May 10, 2006
2Moving Forward
-
- Advancements in biomedical sciences and medical
practices
3Public Interest
Public Health
Community
4Health Disparities in perspective
- Identify risk factors
- Quantify consequences
- Discover and disseminate solutions
5Daily ReportingBasic Questions
- Who? Name, Age, Ethnicity, Gender
- What? Type of condition, Outcome
- When? Date
- Where? Environment, House, Hospital
- Why/How? What prompted the Incident
6Daily ReportingAdditional Questions
- Perspective What type of condition is this? How
typical is this type of condition in this
community? - Employment Education Do the people have jobs?
How much does the individual earn? What level of
education? - Environment How much does the environment
contribute to the condition? - Health Costs How much do these preventable ER
visits and hospitalizations cost? - Consequences to Family What happens to the
families and homes of the individual? - Solutions What is being done to address this
problem?
7Overview
- Background
- Contributing Factors
- Efforts to Address
8Health Disparities
- Health disparities are differences in the
- incidence, prevalence, mortality, and burden of
- diseases and other adverse health conditions
- that exist among specific population groups in
- the United States
Institute of Medicine. Unequal Treatment
Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in
Health Care, 2002
9Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Virtually all Health
Domains
- Premature mortality including infant mortality
- Morbidity
- Chronic disease (cancer, diabetes)
- Communicable disease
- Physiological risk factors
- Hypertension
- Obesity/overweight
- Functional limitations and disability
10Leading Health Disparities
- Cardiovascular Disease
- Cancer
- Diabetes
- HIV/AIDS
- Asthma
- Mental Health
Institute of Medicine. Unequal Treatment
Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in
Health Care, 2002.
11Diabetes
- Type 2 diabetes is more prevalent in Mexican
Americans (13) than in non-Latino Whites (8)
(Hertz et al.) - Latinos in the US are almost twice as likely to
die from diabetes as compared to non-Latino
Whites - (Multicultural Medicine and Health Disparities,
2005)
12Mental Health
- Individuals with mental health illness have high
co-morbidity and mortality rates - Over 26 of Latinos in Los Angeles over age 60
reported major depression or dysphoria - (U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, 2001) - Latinos are less likely than Non Latino Whites to
seek treatment for mental health.
(Cooper-Patrick, 1999)
13What causes these disparities in health?
Health Disparities
Social Determinants
Access To Care
Quality Of Care
14What causes these disparities in health?
15Factors leading to disparitiesSocial
Determinants
- Low Levels of Education
- Low Socioeconomic Status
- Behavior and Environment
16Social DeterminantsThe Latino Case Example
- Education
- Latino children have highest high school drop out
rates - Environment
- Latino children have greater exposure to
pollutants, waste sites, pesticides, lead
mercury - 3 of 5 largest landfills in Latino AA
communities (Kaiser Network) - Employment
- Latinos are well represented in the workforce,
but work in low wage and disproportionately
higher risk jobs.
17What causes these disparities in health?
- Social Determinants
- Access to Care
18Health Insurance
- Health insurance facilitates entry into the
health care system - The uninsured are more likely to die early have
poor health status because they are diagnosed at
later disease states - Higher costs, poor outcomes, and greater
disparities are observed among individuals
without a usual source of care
19Access to Care The Latino Case Example
- 40 of Latinos under 65 are uninsured
(National Health Care
Disparities Report, 2005) - Latino children make up 29 of uninsured children
(Flores et al., 2005) - One quarter of the nations uninsured are Latino
(11 of 44 million Americans) (Goldstein,
2000) - Reasons include lack of employer-based health
insurance and low income
20What causes these disparities in health?
- Social Determinants
- Access to Care
- Health Care
21Racial/Ethnic Disparities inHealth Care
- Within Medicare
- Differential utilization based on race for
- Mammography (Gornick et al.)
- Amputations (Gornick et al.)
- Influenza vaccination (Gornick et al.)
- Lung Cancer Surgery (Bach et al.)
- Renal Transplantation (Ayanian et al.)
- Cardiac catheterization angioplasty (Harris et
al, Ayanian et al.) - Coronary artery bypass graft (Peterson et al.)
- Treatment of chest pain (Johnson et al.)
- Referral to cardiology specialist care (Schulman
et al.) - Pain management (Todd et al.)
22Language Barriers
- Quality of health care requires effective
communication between patient and physician - Communication problems lead to lower patient
adherence to medications and decreased
participation in medical decision-making
23Language Barriers
- Spanish speakers are less likely to be discharged
from the ER with an understanding of their
medications, special instructions, and plans for
follow-up care (Crane 1997) - Spanish-speaking Latinos are less likely to have
physician visits, flu shots, or mammograms as
compared to English-speaking Latinos or
non-Latino Whites (Fiscella 2002)
24Efforts to Address Disparities in Health
25Steps Towards Translating HealthDisparities
Research Into Policy
- Set The Agenda
- 2) Build The Case
- 3) Beware of Politics in Science
- 4) Develop Comprehensive Approaches
- 5) Recognize that Public Policies Are
Complementary To Health
26Set The Agenda
- Healthy People 2010- Clinton Administration
- Goal Eliminate Health Disparities
27Set The Agenda
- Achieving Equity The Healthy People
Perspective - HP 2010 recognizes that communities, states, and
national organizations will need to take a
multidisciplinary approach to achieving health
equity that involves improving health, education,
housing, labor, justice, transportation,
agriculture, and the environment. - (HP2010 Vol. 1, p. 16)
28Build The Case
- Institute Of Medicine Report (2002)
- Unequal Treatment Confronting Racial And Ethnic
- Disparities In Health Care (www.nap.edu)
- Physicians For Human Rights Report
- The Right To Equal Treatment
- Numerous Health Research Policy Publications
- Health Affairs The Determinants Of Health
(3/2003) - American Journal Of Public Health, Eliminating
Health - Inequalities, October 2003
- Milbank Quarterly A Journal for Population
Health And - Health Policy, Volume 1, 2004
- Numerous Books on Health Disparities And Social
Justice - Health For All Californias Strategic Approach
To - Eliminating Racial And Ethnic Health Disparities
(11/2003)
29Politics And Science in Federal Reports
- This first report clearly demonstrates that
racial, - ethnic and socioeconomic disparities are national
- problems that affect health care at all points in
- the process, at all sites of care, and for all
- medical conditions in fact, disparities in the
- health care system are pervasive.
- -National Health Disparities Report, as submitted
to the - Department Of Health And Human Services (DHHS) by
the - Agency for Healthcare Research And Quality
(AHRQ), July 2003
30Politics And Science in Federal Reports
- This first report finds that, while most
- Americans receive exceptional quality of
- health care and have excellent access to
- needed services, some socioeconomic,
- racial, and ethnic differences exist.
- - National Healthcare Disparities Report, as
released by the DHHS, December 2003
31Differences Between the Two Reports
- Deletes most uses of the word disparity
- Eliminates the conclusion that healthcare
- disparities are national problems
- Removes findings on the social costs of
- disparities and replaces them with a
- discussion of success
- Omits key examples of healthcare disparities
32Comprehensive and Integrated Approaches
- Does health disparities legislation address
- Social Determinants and Environment?
- Health Care System?
-
- Individual Factor?
33A Commitment to Document Disparities
- Collect and report data on health conditions and
health care access by ethnicity, SES and primary
language - Include measures of racial and ethnic disparities
in performance measurements - Report racial and ethnic data by use of
subpopulation groups where possible
34Recognition that Health and OtherSocial Policies
are Complementary
- Invest in young children
- Provide services and opportunities for the
- neediest, including health care
- Strengthen support at the community level
- Improve the work environment
- Create a more equal economic environment
- Assess the effects of economic and social
- action on health
35Resources
- CDC Media Relations-Hispanic Disparities Press
Kit - http//www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/presskits/hhd.htm
- The Office of Minority Health
- http//www.omhrc.gov/
- The National Center for Minority Health
- http//ncmhd.nih.gov/
36Summary
- There is a significant body of evidence that has
identified disparities in health and health care
for Latinos and other underserved populations. - To eliminate disparities, partnerships, research,
advocacy and more comprehensive policy approaches
will be required