
Overview
What is a health disparity? The National Institutes of Health (NIH)
defines health disparities as “differences in the incidence,
prevalence, mortality, and burden of diseases and other adverse
health conditions that exist among specific population groups in the
United States.” Examples of health disparities include differences
in access to care, differences in health outcomes, differences in
health care services delivery and differences in disease patterns in
relation to race, ethnicity, gender, social class, geography or
sexual orientation.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services states that
”There are continuing disparities in the burden of illness and
death experienced by African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian
Americans/Pacific Islanders, and American Indians/Alaska Natives,
as compared to the U.S. population as a whole. Statistical reviews
of the disproportionate toll of certain diseases on racial and
ethnic populations highlights the need for prevention, treatment
and resources toward reducing the loss of life.”
Health Disparities are most pronounced in these six health areas:
1. Infant Mortality - The
United States has made substantial improvements in infant
mortality, but disparities still exist. In 2001, the infant
mortality rate for African American infants more than twice the
rate for White infants (13.3 deaths per 100,000 for African
Americans vs. 5.7 for Whites). In American Indian and Alaska
Native populations, the death rate is 70 percent higher than in
Whites. Although the infant death rate for Hispanic infants is
less than the rate for White infants, within the Puerto Rican
subgroup, the rate of infant deaths from Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome (SIDS) is 1.5 times higher than Whites. SIDS rate for
African Americans was 2.2 times that for Whites.
2. Cancer
– African Americans are more likely to develop cancer than persons
of any other ethnic group and have the highest cancer death rate
relative to other racial or ethnic groups. As for women, although
the rate of newly diagnosed cases of breast cancer is about 13
percent lower than in White women, African American women have
higher mortality rates than any other racial or ethnic group. For
Hispanic women, the incidence of cervical cancer is two and half
times higher than the rate of White women. Asian American/Pacific
Islanders and American Indians have higher rates of stomach cancer
than Whites, and cervical cancer incidence rates are highest among
Hispanic and Vietnamese American women than White women.
3. Cardiovascular
Disease and Stroke – Although heart disease is the leading
cause of death among all racial and ethnic groups African
Americans suffer the most from the disease and they are more
likely to die from the disease. Mexican Americans, who make up the
largest share of the U.S. Hispanic population, also suffer in
greater numbers from overweight and obesity than Whites, two of
the leading risk factors for heart disease. More than 25 percent
of deaths in the Asian and Pacific Islander community and 20
percent of deaths in the American Indian community are caused by
heart disease.
In addition, stroke deaths are substantially higher among African
Americans than Whites
4. Diabetes - Racial and
ethnic minority groups, especially the elderly among these
populations, are disproportionately affected by diabetes. African
Americans are twice as likely to have diabetes as Whites. The
highest incidence of diabetes in African Americans occurs between
65-75 years of age. African American women are especially
affected, with nearly 12 percent of African American women over 20
years of age having diabetes, in comparison to 8.5 percent of men
in the same age group. African Americans with diabetes are more
likely to experience complications of diabetes.
Diabetes is more prevalent in older Hispanics, with about 25 to 30
percent of Hispanics age 50 or over having the disease. About
one-third of Hispanics with diabetes are undiagnosed. Hispanics
are 1.5 times as likely to have diabetes as Whites. And, in 2001
the death rate from diabetes in Hispanics was 40 percent higher
than the death rate of Whites.
The incidence of diabetes among American Indians and Alaska
Natives is more than twice that of Whites. As of 2003, 14.5
percent of the American Indian and Alaska Natives served by the
Indian Health Service had been diagnosed with diabetes.
5. HIV/AIDS - HIV/AIDS has
had a devastating impact on minorities in the United States.
Racial and ethnic minorities accounted for almost 70 percent of
the newly diagnosed cases of HIV and AIDS in 2002. More than 90
percent of babies born with HIV belong to minority groups.
In the African American community, HIV/AIDS has become an
epidemic. More than 54 percent (14,398) of HIV/AIDS diagnoses in
2002 were in African Americans. African Americans are ten times
more likely to die of AIDS than Whites. AIDS is the leading cause
of death in African American women aged 25-34 and the third
leading cause of death in African American men in the same age
group. More than 64 percent of HIV positive infants are African
American. HIV/AIDS is spreading at a rapid rate in the Hispanic
community. Hispanics accounted for around 20 percent of AIDS cases
in 2002, despite making up only 14 percent of the U.S. population.
Hispanics are 60 percent more likely to be diagnosed with AIDS
than Whites. American Indians are three times more likely to have
AIDS than Whites.
6. Immunizations - In 2003,
69 percent of older White persons received influenza vaccination,
compared to only 49 percent and 47 percent of older African
American and Hispanic persons, respectively. Disparities for
pneumococcal vaccination coverage were even wider. Vaccination
rates were nearly 60 percent for Whites, compared to 37 percent
for African Americans and 31 percent for Hispanics.
Healthy People 2010 is a set of health objectives for the
Nation to achieve over the first decade of the new century. It can
be used by many different people, States, communities,
professional organizations, and others to help them develop
programs to improve health. Healthy People 2010 has 2 overarching
goals: To Increase Quality and Years of Healthy and To
Eliminate Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities.
Resources
Healthy Beginnings Program is a program designed to
improve infant mortality rates among African Americans in North
Carolina.
UNC Program on Ethnicity, Culture
and Health Outcomes (ECHO)
The
mission of ECHO is to eliminate health status and health outcomes
disparities through translatable, evidence-based research,
multidisciplinary training and education, and culturally sensitive
service to North Carolina communities.
The Office of Minority Health issues a report titled:
"Eliminating Health Disparities in the U.S". The report can be found
on their website.
The
Health Disparities Collaboratives strive to achieve
excellence in practice through the following goals:
- Generate and document improved health outcomes for underserved
populations;
- Transform clinical practice through models of care,
improvement and learning;
- Develop infrastructure, expertise and multi-disciplinary
leadership to support and drive improved health status; and
- Build strategic partnerships.
The American Medical Association (AMA) has encouraged
physicians to examine their own practices to ensure equality in
medical care. Learn about AMA programs and activities committed to
the elimination of racial and ethnic health care disparities.
References
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. HHS Fact Sheet: The
Initiative to Eliminate RAcial and Ethnic Disparities in Health.
2004 Accessed at:
http://raceandhealth.hhs.gov/glance.htm
Healthy People 2010 Accessed at:
http://www.healthypeople.gov/