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Addressing Health Disparities: An Innovative Approach sfdsdf

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Title: 
Addressing Health Disparities: An Innovative Approach
Authors: 
Lt. Governor Anthony G. Brown
Publication Date: 
July 3, 2012
Body: 

As a child, I watched my father, an African American physician, work in some of the most underserved neighborhoods in our community. He treated medical conditions that had escalated to serious illness and disability because of lack of access to affordable, quality health care. Although he served these communities with hope, it pained him to see how unchecked disease and disability had diminished so much potential in underserved, minority communities. He worked patiently, tirelessly to right this inequity the only way he knew: one patient at a time.

Forty years later, health care access and quality are still woefully unequal and alarming racial disparities still exist. African American babies in Maryland are three times more likely to die before the age of one than white babies. African Americans are four times more likely to visit an emergency room for asthma. When adjusted for age, African Americans in this state are twice as likely to die from diabetes or kidney disease than whites, and are almost twice as likely to lack health insurance.

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Reducing health disparities also lowers costs for all taxpayers. A 2009 report by the Health Policy Institute at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies estimated that between 2003 and 2006, nearly $230 billion in direct medical care costs could have been saved nationwide if racial and ethnic health disparities did not exist. One report of Medicare claims found that African Americans were nearly twice as likely to be hospitalized for such treatable conditions as asthma, hypertension and heart failure, costing Maryland an additional $26 million in 2006. Attracting practitioners to deliver health care services in underserved communities through the Health Enterprise Zones program will help drive down costs while reducing serious illness and disease.


Read more at The Afro.

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Health care bill could reduce inequities sfdsdf

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Title: 
Health care bill could reduce inequities
Authors: 
Brian D. Smedley, Ph.D.
Publication Date: 
June 29, 2012
Body: 

The U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) represents a significant advancement in the effort to repair the deeply-broken U.S. healthcare system and promote equitable opportunities for good health for all.  As long as its provisions are fully funded by Congress, the law will improve access to health insurance for more than 32 million Americans, prevent insurance companies from cherry-picking enrollees and denying claims because of pre-existing conditions, and incentivize more health-care providers to work in medically underserved communities.

These are among the benefits that the law is already providing, in addition to what is expected as provisions of the ACA come into force over the next two years.

In addition to ruling that the law’s mandate requiring insurance coverage is constitutional, the Court’s decision ensures that other key provisions of the legislation remain intact, many of which hold great promise to address the needs of those who face the greatest barriers to good health—particularly people of color, who are the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. population.

Read more at thegrio.com.

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Ralph Everett on Upholding the Affordable Health Care Act sfdsdf

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Title: 
Ralph Everett on Upholding the Affordable Health Care Act
Publication Date: 
June 28, 2012
Body: 

The U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) represents a significant advancement in the effort to repair the deeply broken U.S. healthcare system and promote equitable opportunities for good health for all.  As long as its provisions are fully funded by Congress, the law will improve access to health insurance for more than 32 million Americans, prevent insurance companies from cherry-picking enrollees and denying claims because of pre-existing conditions, and incentivize more health-care providers to work in medically underserved communities.

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Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Pregnancy Outcomes: Exploring the Role of Paternal Involvement sfdsdf

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Title: 
Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Pregnancy Outcomes: Exploring the Role of Paternal Involvement
Body: 

The National Institutes of Health's Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development will present the next session in its Health Disparities Seminar Series, Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Pregnancy Outcomes: Exploring the Role of Paternal Involvement, on Monday, July 16, 2012. This workshop will address the role of prospective fathers in pregnancy outcomes and the gaps in research on the subject.

HPI's Dr. Jermane Bond is scheduled to be a speaker at this event.

For more information, visit the NICHD by clicking the "REGISTER" button on the right.

Date
Date: 
July 16, 2012 (All day)
Timezone: 
EST
Location
Name: 
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
Address 1: 
6100 Executive Boulevard
Address 2: 
Fifth Floor Conference Room
City: 
Bethesda
State: 
Maryland
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Thank you for registering for [title]. You should receive a confirmation e-mail shortly.

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Dr. Regina James
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Contact Phone: 
(301) 435-2692
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Work to reduce vast health discrepancies in New Orleans neighborhoods: An editorial sfdsdf

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Title: 
Work to reduce vast health discrepancies in New Orleans neighborhoods: An editorial
Publication Date: 
June 22, 2012
Body: 

The wide discrepancies in the quality of life of New Orleanians in different parts of the city have long been documented. But a report that shows life expectancy varies as much as 25 years depending on ZIP code is still striking.

The data should prompt city, state and federal health officials to continue efforts to bridge chronic inequalities in health care and other social and economic conditions in numerous city neighborhoods.

The report, by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, found that average life expectancy in ZIP code 70112, the city's poorest in parts of Mid-City and Treme, is only 54 1/2 years. That's comparable to the health prospects of people in some sub-Saharan African nations. In large areas from Central City to parts of the Bywater to the Upper and Lower 9th Wards, life expectancy is only slightly better: 58 years or less. In all these areas, residents are mostly African-American.

Read more at The Greater New Orleans Times-Picayune.

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Life Expectancy is Low in Some Parts of New Orleans sfdsdf

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Title: 
Life Expectancy is Low in Some Parts of New Orleans
Authors: 
Maki Somosot
Publication Date: 
June 20, 2012
Body: 

The average life expectancy for people in certain parts of New Orleans is just 54 years, according to a new report, meaning that residents there have about the same prospects as people in sub-Saharan African nations such as Cameroon and Angola. In other sections of town, people can expect to live an average of 80 years, putting them in the company of wealthier countries such as New Zealand and the Netherlands.

Along with life expectancy, the report by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies and the Orleans PLACE MATTERS initiative analyzes public health across a wide range of measures, ranging from heart disease to violent crime, and maps the results by ZIP code.

The results are sobering.

Read more at the Times-Picayune.

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Place Matters for Health in Orleans Parish: Ensuring Opportunities for Good Health for All sfdsdf

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Title: 
Place Matters for Health in Orleans Parish: Ensuring Opportunities for Good Health for All
Authors: 
Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies
Orleans Parish PLACE MATTERS Team
Publication Date: 
June 19, 2012
Research Type: 
Publications
Body: 

PLACE MATTERS for health in important ways, according to a growing body of research. Differences in neighborhood conditions powerfully predict who is healthy, who is sick, and who lives longer. And because of patterns of residential segregation, these differences are the fundamental causes of health inequities among different racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups.

The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies and the Orleans Parish PLACE MATTERS team are very pleased to add to the existing knowledge base with this report, Place Matters for Health in Orleans Parish: Ensuring Opportunities for Good Health for All. The report, supported by a grant from the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) of the National Institutes of Health and written in conjunction with the Center on Human Needs at the Virginia Commonwealth University and the Virginia Network for Geospatial Health Research, provides a comprehensive analysis of the range of social, economic, and environmental conditions in Orleans Parish and documents their relationship to the health status of the Parish’s residents.

The study finds that social, economic, and environmental conditions in low-income and non-white neighborhoods make it more difficult for people in these neighborhoods to live healthy lives. Among the study’s key findings are that life expectancy in the Parish varies by as much as 25 years depending on the zip code. Zip codes with the lowest life expectancy tend to have a higher percentage of people of color and low-income residents. Community-level risk factors, such as high concentrations of people living in poverty, overcrowded households, households without a vehicle, and vacant housing are among the factors that predict health inequalities in the Parish.

The overall pattern in this report – and those of others that the Joint Center has conducted with other PLACE MATTERS communities – suggests that we need to tackle the structures and systems that create and perpetuate inequality to fully close racial and ethnic health gaps.

Download the summary here or the full report below.

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Joint Center Report Examines How Social, Economic Conditions in New Orleans Are Linked to Poor Health Outcomes sfdsdf

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Title: 
Joint Center Report Examines How Social, Economic Conditions in New Orleans Are Linked to Poor Health Outcomes
Publication Date: 
June 19, 2012
Body: 

The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies and the Orleans Parish, LA, Place Matters team today released a report documenting how neighborhood social and economic conditions in New Orleans powerfully shape racial and ethnic health inequities in the city.

Place Matters for Health in Orleans Parish: Ensuring Opportunities for Good Health for All finds that residents’ zip codes are an important indicator of the health and health risks.  Importantly, because of persistent racial and class segregation, place of residence is an especially important driver of the poorer health outcomes of the city’s non-white and low-income residents.

The report, prepared by the Joint Center and the Orleans Parish Place Matters team in conjunction with the Center for Human Needs at Virginia Commonwealth University and the Virginia Network for Geospatial Health Research, was supported by a grant from the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) of the National Institutes of Health.   The study provides a comprehensive analysis of the range of social, economic and environmental conditions in New Orleans – which is the only municipal jurisdiction in the parish – and documents their relationship to the health status of the city’s residents.
 

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Del. Donna M. Christensen Cites the Joint Center sfdsdf

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Title: 
Del. Donna M. Christensen Cites the Joint Center
Publication Date: 
March 19, 2012
Body: 

Delegate Donna M. Christensen of the U.S. Virgin Islands cites Joint Center research during a session of the United States House of Representatives on March 19, 2012.

The video can be found at C-SPAN.

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Race and Ethnicity Data Collection: Beyond Standardization sfdsdf

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Title: 
Race and Ethnicity Data Collection: Beyond Standardization
Authors: 
Brooke Cunningham, M.D., Ph.D.
Publication Date: 
June 12, 2012
Research Type: 
Publications
Body: 

Many nonwhite populations in the United States have poorer health relative to whites across a wide array of health measures. Many also face greater barriers to accessing high-quality health care than whites, barriers that a growing number of public and private sector actors seeks to eliminate. These efforts, however, have been impaired by an inadequate understanding of race and ethnicity in the U.S. context. What defines a “racial” or “ethnic” group? Why do race and ethnicity matter when it comes to health research and health care? Absent clear answers to these questions, researchers, policy makers, and the general public frequently resort to antiquated assumptions about race, ethnicity, and human variability that obscure a more accurate understanding of the role that these factors play in contributing to health inequities.

This brief serves as a starting point for those who wish to better understand race, ethnicity, and the use of these categories in health. In the first half of the brief, the difference between race and ethnicity is reviewed and an overview of genetics is presented in order to explain why race is in fact not genetic. The second half of this brief reviews the history of race data collection by federal agencies. This history demonstrates the social construction of race by chronicling how race categories
have changed over time. In addition, it reminds us that government agencies are crucial sites for determining what race is and how it will be used. Finally, in the last section of the brief, major challenges to accurate data collection are reviewed and several actions are recommended that the federal governmentcould take to move the field of health and health care disparities research to its next stage.

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