Monday, October 27, 2014

Blog 7 Health Care Injustice in US

Health Care Injustice










  The more I read, the more eye opening opportunities I have.  Most of the time it is a status quo of a society built on race and gender discrimination where people of color are suffering in all aspects of life including health care.  Those people are living in a very hard situation that contributing to less fortunate conditions with education, employment, housing and also health care.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                             "Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane." -- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
 
 African Americans have higher death rates than whites from cancer (1/4 higher), heart disease (1/3 higher), diabetes (twice as high), homicide (more than 5 times as high), and AIDS (more than 8 times as high).  The infant mortality rate for the African Americans was, in 2002-2003, over twice as high as for whites.  In all, the lower you are in a social hierarchy, the worse your health and the shorter your life is likely to be.


Many factors contribute to racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic health disparities, including inadequate access to care, poor quality of care, community features (such as poverty and violence) and personal behaviors. These factors are often associated with underserved racial and ethnic minority groups, individuals who have experienced economic obstacles, those with disabilities and individuals living within medically underserved communities.  Consequently, individuals living in both urban and rural areas may experience health disparities.
Despite ongoing efforts to reduce health disparities in the United States, racial and ethnic disparities in both health and health care persist. Even when income, health insurance and access to care are accounted for, disparities remain.  Low performance on a range of health indicators—such as infant mortality, life expectancy, prevalence of chronic disease, and insurance coverage—reveal differences between racial and ethnic minority populations and their white counterparts.

Jennifer Ng’andu, deputy director of the Health Policy Project at the National Council of La Raza in Washington, speaks even more pointedly: “If we look at communities of color, we see that many racial and ethnic groups live in unsafe environments, there is poor housing and there is loss of productivity because of illness.
“Essentially, every time a person of color goes to the doctor, 30 percent of their bill is due to health disparities so they end up paying more in the doctor’s office because over time they receive health care that is not appropriate or effective,” she says. “They become needlessly sicker and are more likely to die prematurely, so they end up paying more medical expenses.”
Health experts and civic leaders say financial strains are adversely manifested in varying ways in communities and have a huge impact on children, often involving academic performance.
“There are direct biological consequences in that a child who does not have good access to health services will experience developmental setbacks because they are sick or their parents are sick,” Ng’andu says. “It makes it harder for them to achieve in school and can have serious consequences on their future. We have to invest in children early, their health early, their education, making sure they have healthy communities to grow in.”

Ng’andu agrees. “When kids are hungry, when they are exposed to serious nerve stress and environmental stresses,” she says, “it affects them and their ability to learn and perform well academically. Investment in their health is very important to their future success and achievement and also their ability to work and contribute to their communities.”
Hernandez-Cancio says disparities in infant mortality rates also take a toll on minority families. While the 2010 rate for whites was 5.63 per 1,000 live births, it was 13.31 per 1,000 live births for African-Americans, 9.22 for American Indians or Alaska Natives and 7.71 for Puerto Ricans, according to the CDC.
“The infant mortality rate is considered a very basic measure of how a country’s health care system is working, and it is an indication of other symptoms,” she says. “We rank 41st globally. As an advanced, wealthy nation, we are not doing well.”
With the quotation said by Martin Luther King, Jr, hasn't the prejudice that prevailed in those far off times been eliminated in today's more equitable society? Or do health disparities persist in less obvious but no 
less worrying ways -- and not just for African-Americans?

Studies emphatically conclude that such disparities do persist.
U.S. News and World Report released its latest issue announcing the best hospitals in the nation on Tuesday. People put a lot of stock in these rankings, and equality of treatment should be considered as a factor in what makes a hospital excellent.
“Unequal Treatment”, published by the Institute of Medicine in 2002, spelled out exactly how Latinos, African-Americans, Native-Americans, Asian-Americans, and Pacific Islanders receive care that's inferior to that enjoyed by mainstream Americans. The IOM report triggered other studies that demonstrated the (often unconscious) prejudice that prevails in treating women, the elderly, the LGBT community, the obese --13 groups in all -- a large percentage of the health care consuming public.
Here are a few shocking examples: Women with symptoms of heart disease often are not transported by emergency medical services to health facilities as rapidly as men. Women and blacks with heart attack symptoms are not given cardiac catheterizations and other appropriate clinical tests at the same rate as white men. Latinos and African-Americans do not receive the same pain medication for long bone fractures as do their fellow citizens.

According to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., “A genuine leader is not a searcher for consensus but a molder of consensus.” 
Dr. King is telling us that if we want to be leaders, we need to lead—that is, we need to develop ideas and convince others of their merit. A leader doesn’t figure out where everyone is going and then jump to the front of the line. A leader chooses a destination, convinces others of the merits of taking the trip, shows them how they can get there, and then leads them on the journey.  Let’s allow the leader in ourselves to be awakened.  Our nation’s health depends on it.
























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5 comments:

  1. I think that Individuals need adequate health care in order to live productive lives. It's so hard thinking about all of the people living without it who are truly in need.

    "Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane." -- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

    I agree! ^

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  4. I agree with you Zoe. I think without adequate health care life is very difficult and it only attributes to other attributes of poverty. We as a country focus so much attention on eating healthy, exercising, and taking care of ourselves, it is too bad that government policy doesn't reflect that. Human health should not be a monetary privilege!

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  5. This makes me very angry as there is no excuse for not meeting everyone's basic medical needs in today's society. Even in a state with a lack of diversity we need to be thinking and talking about this issue.

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