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HEALTH DISPARITIES:

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Cancer Death Rate, 2002. Cardiovascular Disease. Death ... Treatment not likely to result in control of hyperlipidemia, hypertension and diabetes mellitus. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HEALTH DISPARITIES:


1
  • HEALTH DISPARITIES
  • Why the States MUST Answer the Call to Action
  • Evelyn L. Lewis, MD, MA
    Adjunct Associate Professor
  • Deputy Director, USU Center for Health
    Disparities Research and Education

2
  • Healthcare Disparity
  • What is healthcare disparity?
  • Why is it important?
  • What is the impact?

3
Healthcare Disparities
  • Among the nations most serious health care
    problems (IOM 2002)
  • Approximately 30 percent of Americans are racial
    or ethnic minorities and even greater diversity
    of the US is expected.
  • Healthcare quality and health outcomes across
    ethnic and racial populations is disturbing

4
Healthcare Disparity
  • When the differences in higher rates of
    morbidity and mortality in minorities is a result
    of them being less likely than whites to receive
    needed services including clinically necessary
    procedures
  • When Racial and Ethnic minorities receive lower
    quality healthcare than whites, even when insured
    to the same degree and healthcare access issues
    are the same

5
Cancer Death Rate, 2002
6
Cardiovascular Disease Death Rate, 2002Deaths
per 100,000 population
7
Diabetes-Related Death Rate, 2002
8
STATE OF MARYLAND Case Study
  • 6th Wealthiest State (per capita income)
  • Age lt65 population 88.5
  • African Americans population 28
    -Hispanic and other population 7.2
  • 84 Graduate HS, 35 Advance Degree
  • 890 million per year hospitalization cost for
    CVD

9
Leading Causes Of
Death In MD, 1998
  • 6. Diabetes
  • 7. Unintentional injury
  • 8. Septicemia
  • 9. Homicide
  • 10. HIV
  • 1. Heart Disease
  • 2. Cancer
  • 3. CVD
  • 4. COPD
  • 5. Pneumonia and influenza

10

11
  • Healthcare Disparity
  • Clinical Imperative
  • Economic Imperative
  • Political Imperative

12
Clinical Imperative
  • CVD Leading cause of death among black adults
    (Maryland- 66
    of all CVD deaths are African Americans)
  • CVD First leading cause of death among black men
    ages 45-64. Second leading cause of death among
    black women ages 20-64
  • Treatment rates Low for hyperlipidemia higher
    for hypertension and diabetes mellitus.
  • Treatment not likely to result in control of
    hyperlipidemia, hypertension and diabetes
    mellitus.
  • Ischemic heart disease, congestive heart failure,
    stroke occur at a younger age, higher
    prevalence among black adults than non-blacks

13
Clinical Imperative


RR2
Diabetes Mellitus
RR2.2
Major Depression
RR3
Bipolar
14
  • Economic Imperative
  • Highest Prevalence of Chronic Diseases
  • African-American Men Have a 40 Higher Rate of
    Heart Disease and 2X Rate of Strokes
  • Hispanics, Aged 35-64, Have a 1.3 X Higher
  • Risk of Stroke Deaths

National Business Group On Health
15
Health Disparities and Chronic Conditions
16
By 2008, 41.5 of Workforce Will Be Ethnic
Minorities
17

Political Imperative
  • Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in
    health is the most shocking and the most
    inhuman.
  • The Rev. Martin Luther King

    2nd National Convention of the Medical
    Committee
    for Human Rights, 1966

18
Congressional Proposals
  • Comprehensive Health Disparities Legislation
    Introduced in the Senate by Majority Leader
    Frist and Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA)
  • Currently there are no plans for companion
    legislation to be introduced in the House of
    Representatives. Additionally, Senator Gregg has
    said he will not support the Frist- Landrieu
    legislation
  • The Healthcare Equality and Accountability Act
  • Introduced in the Senate by Tom Daschle (D-SD)
    and in the House of Representatives by Rep.
    Elijah Cummings
  • The Hispanic Health Improvement Act
  • Introduced in the Senate by Jeff Bingaman (D-NM)
    and in the House of Representatives by Ciro
    Rodriquez (D-TX)
  • The Native Hawaiian Health Care Improvement
    Reauthorization.
  • Introduced in the Senate by Daniel Inouye (D-HI)
    and in the House of Representatives by Rep. Neil
    Abercrombie (D-HI)

19
National Institutes of Health
Minorities are less likely to be given
appropriate cardiac medications or to undergo
bypass surgery
African-Americans suffer strokes as much as 35
percent higher than whites do, but they are less
likely to receive major diagnostic and
therapeutic interventions
Less likely to be on waiting lists for
transplants or to receive dialysis.
Less likely to receive appropriate medications
to manage chronic symptoms
20
Potential Sources of Disparities
  • Patient-level factors patient preferences,
    refusal of treatment, poor adherence, biological
    differences, cultural competency
  • Health systems-level factors financing,
    structure of care, cultural and linguistic
    barriers, cultural competency
  • Clinical encounter stereotyping, prejudice, and
    clinical uncertainty, cultural competency

21
Level of Healthcare Satisfaction
22
Language, Communication and Health Disparities
  • 37 million adults in the U.S. speak a language
    other than English
  • 18 million people (48 percent) speak English less
    than "very well."
  • Language and communication can affect the amount
    and quality of health care received.
  • Rural vs Urban vs inner city vs social classes
  • Center on an Aging Society analysis of data from
    the 2000 Census, QT-P17, Ability to speak
    English. Washington, DC U.S. Bureau of the
    Census, Census Summary File 3 ? Sample Data.9.
    Fiscella, K., Franks, P., Doescher, M. P.,
    Saver, B. G. 2002. Disparities in health care by
    race, ethnicity and language among the insured
    Findings from a national sample. Medical Care,
    40(1), 52-59.10. Collins et al. 2002.

23
Disparities in the Clinical Encounter The Core
Paradox
  • Bias No evidence shows that providers are more
    likely than the general public to express biases,
    but evidence suggests that unconscious biases may
    exist
  • Uncertainty When providers treat patients that
    are dissimilar in cultural or linguistic
    background
  • Stereotyping Evidence suggests that physicians,
    like everyone else, use these cognitive
    shortcuts

24
Patients ExperiencingSymptoms of Heart Disease
(Schulman et al., 1999)
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