Title: Minority Health and Health Disparities
1Minority Healthand Health Disparities
2Objectives
- List some populations that might require the
health educator to prepare material differently
for presentation - Describe ethnic and racial disparities in
selected areas of health - Describe the extent of research related to health
and minority populations. - Explain the research concerns and difficulties in
studying minority health. - Describe the legacy of suspicion and concern
among ethnic and racial minorities in the wake of
the Tuskegee study.
3Factors That Affect the Health of a Community
Physical Factors
Social/Cultural factors
Health of The Community
Community organization
Individual behaviors
Source McKenzie, Pinger, Kotecki (2006)
4How do we approach a community?
What you see is not what you get!
5Culture
Past - Present Culture changes everyday
6Navigational Tool?
Cultural Competency
Who's more diverse?
7Diversity
External Internal
Gender
Race
region of origin
SES
Color
Ethnicity
politics
Ability
language
resident status
sexual orientation
Class
Experience
8Health practices - Smoking - Alcohol -
Nutrition
Race Health
Biological
Cultural
Psychosocial stress - Smoking - Alcohol -
Nutrition
Socioeconomic
Environmental stress - Residential -
Occupational
Biological processes
Race
Racism
Political
Health outcomes
Psychosocial resources - Social ties -
Perceptions of control - Coping patterns
Historical
Medical care - Need - Access - Quality
Legal
9Overview of Diversity
- The strength and greatness of America lies in the
diversity of its people - melting pot
- 1997 President Clinton
- One America in the 21st Century
10U.S. Population 2000
11U.S. Population 2050 projected
12Racial and Ethnic Classifications
- U. S Office of Management and Budget
- operationalize race and ethnicity
- Five racial categories
- White
- African American
- American Indian, Eskimo
- Asian, Pacific Islander
- Hispanic
13Six Health Areas
- Infant mortality
- Cancer Screening and Management
- Cardiovascular Disease
- Diabetes
- HIV Infections/AIDS
- Child and Adult Immunization
14Documents
- Healthy People 2010
- Initiative to Eliminate Racial and Ethnic
Minorities in Health - 2/21/98 Clinton declared that by the year 2010
the US would eliminate the disparities in six
health areas experienced by racial and ethnic
minority populations by - prevent disease
- promote health
- delivering care to racial and ethnic minority
communities
15(No Transcript)
16Health data sources and their limitations
- Gaps in the information system
- bias analysis
- self-reported data
- reliability
17Refugees New Immigrants
- Refugees a person who flees one area or country
to seek shelter or protection from danger is
another - Immigrants individuals who migrate from one
country to another for the purpose of seeking
permanent residence - Aliens a person born in and owing allegiance to
a country other than the one in which he/she
lives - Illegal aliens an individual who entered this
country without permission - Special Concerns
- poor
- lower levels of education
- few work skills
- serious health problems
18Socioeconomic Status Racial and Ethnic
Disparities in Health
- Indirect causal associations
- level of education
- level of income
- poverty
- Group living circumstances
19Community Health Strategies for Achieving Equity
in Minority Health
- Cultural Competence
- A set of congruent behaviors, attitudes, and
policies that come together in a system, agency,
or among professionals that enables effective
work in cross cultural situations. - Empowering the Self and the Community
- social power
- political power
- psychological power
20President Clinton recounted the injustice done to
the study participants and concluded, "what was
done cannot be undone but we can end the silence.
We can stop turning our heads away. We can look
at you in the eye, and finally say, on behalf of
the American people, what the United States
government did was shameful and I am sorry.
21Tuskegee Syphilis Study
- Research study from 1932-1972
- United States Public Health Service
- African American Community
- 399 Black men late stages of syphilis
- Study the testing and treatment of syphilis in 5
rural counties in the south - They were never told what disease they were
suffering from or of its seriousness
22Research
- Informed that they were being treated for bad
blood - PHS had no intention of curing them of syphilis
- Data for the experiment was to be collected from
autopsies of the men - Died from tumors, heart disease, paralysis,
blindness, insanity, and death
23Tuskegee cont
- Five counties
- Albemarle County, Va
- Glynn County, GA
- Pitt County, NC
- Macon County, AL
- Tipton County, TN
We have no further interest in these patients
until they die.
PHS Physician
24Tuskegee cont
- By the end of the experiment, 28 of the men had
died directly of syphilis, 100 were dead of
related complications, 40 of their wives had been
infected, and 19 of their children had been born
with congenital syphilis.
25Textbook Approach
- Black institutions cooperated
- Black churches added credibility
- Black community leaders ensured participation
26Tuskegee Summary
- Treatment was not provided
- Education was not provided
- Referred to as bad blood
- Persons were not told that the disease was a STD
or that infants could be born infected - WWII 1941 these men were not drafted
- 1943 penicillin was being used to treat syphilis
- This treatment was withheld from the men in the
study (treatment would end the study)
27Tuskegee
- The study continued until 1972
- The Washington Star broke the story
In 1972, news anchor Harry Reasoner described it
as an experiment that used human beings as
laboratory animals in a long and inefficient
study of how long it takes syphilis to kill
someone.
28Tuskegee
- In a White House ceremony 5/16/97 Clinton
apologized for the 40-year government study - Only eight survivors of the Tuskegee experiment
were still alive - Five attended the ceremony accompanied by family
members of some of the deceased
29Implications of the Study
- What are the implications of the Tuskegee study
for health educators? - What can we learn from this obviously inhumane
and unethical research? - Is there a connection between the Tuskegee study
and the current AIDS epidemic?
30Cultural Competency
- Develop better access to services by hiring
bilingual and bicultural staff members. - Tailor interventions by learning about other
cultures. - Modify services by integrating traditional
medicine with Western medicine. - Develop a specialized program model
31Strategies for Diverse Cultures
- Channel efforts through minority communities
- Tailor health messages
- Involve family, churches, employers and other
community organizations - Provide culturally sensitive materials to reduce
language barriers, cultural differences, etc. - Assess suitability of existing materials
- Develop minority support networks, clubs, etc.
32Points To Consider Before Presenting
- What is the precise mix of the class or audience?
- Find out more about the demographics of the
group. Where do they live urban, suburban,
rural? - Educational level?
- SES level?
- Language proficiency of classes/groups?
- Immigrant who speak little English?
- Translator needed?
- Any health problems?
33References
- Gilbert, G.G., Sawyer, R.G. (2000). Health
education Creating strategies for school and
community health (2nd ed.) Boston Jones and
Bartlett. - McKenzie, J.F., Pinger, R.R., Kotecki, J.E.
(2005). An introduction to community health
(5th ed.) Boston Jones and Bartlett. - http//www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/surveillance/resourc
es/slides/race-ethnicity/index.htm - http//www.omhrc.gov/