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Two New Studies Paint Bleak Picture of Minority Health in AmericaNurses who are familiar with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ national initiative to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in health by 2010 are already well aware that accomplishing these goals will be no small task. Now two groundbreaking new reports on the status of minority health care in the U.S. not only confirm that fact but also present disturbing evidence that the gap of unequal health outcomes between Caucasian Americans and Americans of color may be even wider and deeper than experts had originally believed. Minority Americans lag behind whites in nearly every measure of health care is the sobering conclusion of Diverse Communities, Common Concerns: Assessing Health Care Quality for Minority Americans, a study by The Commonwealth Fund, a private foundation supporting independent research on health and social issues. The study was based on a 2001 survey of more than 6,700 Hispanic, African-American, Asian American and Caucasian adults age 18 and older nationwide. The findings reveal that minority Americans do not fare as well as whites in a wide range of health care quality measures, including effective patient-physician communication, overcoming cultural and linguistic barriers to health care, access to health services and medical insurance, and feeling that they are being treated with respect by health care providers. For example:
As our population grows more diverse, these findings send a clear warning that the health care quality divide is in danger of turning into a gulf, concludes Karen Davis, president of The Commonwealth Fund. To ensure a healthy future for all, we must work to improve every quality of care measure. We should pay particular attention to those areas where minority Americans are at greatest risk, such as eliminating barriers linked to language, literacy and lack of health insurance. A Call to Action These concerns and recommendations are echoed in Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care, a newly published report from the Institute of Medicine (IOM), one of the four National Academies. This exhaustive, nearly 600-page study was sponsored by the Department of Health and Human Services, with additional support from The Commonwealth Fund and the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. The congressionally mandated report shows that racial and ethnic minorities in this country tend to receive lower-quality health care than whites do, even when their insurance status, income, age and severity of conditions are comparable. The authors also emphasize that disparities in treating such deadly conditions as heart disease, cancer and HIV infection are partly responsible for higher death rates for Americans of color. The study presents numerous examples to support these conclusions, such as:
Both of these landmark reports are available for use by health professionals and educators. To order a free copy of the Commonwealth Fund study, call (888) 777-2744 and request publication number 523, or visit www.cmwf.org. The 80-page report can also be downloaded from the Web site. Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care can be purchased from the National Academy Press at (800) 624-6242 or www.nap.edu/. The complete text of the 598-page study, organized into six sections, can also be viewed online. compiled by the editors of Minority Nurse magazine |
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