Showing posts with label policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label policy. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

2012 Science of Eliminating Health Disparities Summit



Registration:
General registration for 2012 Science of Eliminating Health Disparities Summit is now open. 

Join us on October 31, 2012 through November 3rd, 2012 at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center, National Harbor, MD to learn more about national and international science,
practice, and policy efforts around health disparities. Register today at http://www.nimhd.nih.gov/summit_site/registration.html.  Registration for concurrent session will open in August 2012.

Abstract Submissions: 11 more days before 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time, June 15, 2012 abstract submission deadline. for more information, visit http://www.nimhd.nih.gov/summit_site/abstracts.html


Monday, November 9, 2009

Health Care Reform: Implications for Advancing Health Equity

November 13, 2009
12:00 - 1:00 p.m.

Sanger Hall, Room 2-020
Guest Speaker: Kalahn Taylor-Clark, PhD, MPH

You don't want to miss this lecture! Kalahn Taylor-Clark, PhD, MPH, of the prestigious Brookings Institute will give a talk on healthcare reform and health equity. Her lecture is scheduled for November 13, 2009, Sanger Hall, Room 2-020 from noon to 1 p.m.

Dr. Taylor-Clark, Research Director at the Brookings Institute, leads the Racial/Ethnic Health Care Equity Initiative. This initiative is part of an effort to improve the quality and accessibility of race/ethnicity data in the health care sector.

Prior to joining Brookings, Dr. Taylor-Clark was a lecturer at Tufts University, where she taught "Women and Health" and "The Politics of Health Disparities." Previously, Dr. Taylor-Clark held a position as a researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health’s Project on Biological Security and the Public. Her areas of research include public health communication in politically and socially marginalized populations and minority voting on health care.

She earned her doctorate degree in Health Policy and Political Analysis from Harvard University, where she was recently a W.K. Kellogg Health Scholar.

This event is sponsored by the Department of Epidemiology and Community Health in partnership with the Center on Health Disparities.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Organizations banding together to effect policy change

Over 250 organizations from across the country signed on to support the inclusion of health equity provisions in the federal health reform package. Read the letter that was sent to the Senate Majority Leader and relevant committee chairs. A similar letter was sent to the House side as well.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Response to Ideas about Racial HIV Disparities

I've heard varied responses to the article, "Racial HIV Disparities Are an Indictment of the US Response to the Epidemic." Here are my thoughts...

I didn’t interpret this article as saying it is entirely the responsibility of government to address the HIV epidemic in the African American population. However, the authors point out that the current strategies, which focus primarily on behavior change, are not sufficient. They cite evidence that when infection rates are controlled for by a broad range of demographic and behavioral variables, the inequity still exists. In particular, they note that “exposure to the virus is more likely among blacks than among whites for any given number of partners or frequency of sexual contacts.” They cite social and economic factors that explain this.

To respond to this evidence, the authors draw attention to the importance of social determinants of health and the policies that help determine their distribution as critical factors that have not been sufficiently considered in response to the HIV epidemic. Certainly the housing policies over the last 40 years, and some, although not all welfare policies have probably contributed to the problem. Some evidence suggests that many policies from the 1960s helped reduce health inequities. Nonetheless, you make a good point: while public policy is an important part of promoting health equity, even well intended policies must be evaluated to determine their impact on health and well-being.

However, to stop at policies in the last 40 years, ignores the longer history that has disadvantaged African American communities and contributed to the current situation. Long before the 1960s, segregation existed in Virginia and in Richmond. From my understanding, laws first appeared in Richmond in the early 1900s to create de jure segregation. De facto segregation existed before then. In addition, New Deal policies, the GI bill, redlining practices of banks, steering of minorities into minority communities by real estate agents, etc. were/are all implemented in ways to encourage and reinforce segregation. Given the broader social context, it’s not surprising that higher poverty rates, lower rates of educational attainment, higher infant mortality rates, shorter life expectancy among African Americans, etc. have existed since national statistics have been collected in the U.S, and that there is a current inequity in HIV.

I agree that re-evaluating public housing policies and welfare policies is an important step to promoting health equity. Improving those policies alone will not eliminate the inequities in living conditions and experiences because segregation and the associated social context exist outside of public housing communities. Research clearly shows that low income communities and minority communities regardless of economic status are less likely to have the resources that promote health (full service grocery stores, safe and affordable places to exercise, safety, convenient transportation, job opportunities, high performing schools, positive early childhood experiences and stable families, access to quality health care, etc.).

The article points to these types of factors as being important in addressing the inequity in HIV. We also know that these factors are associated with the broad range of inequities we see among racial and ethnic minorities and low income populations around the state. Creating environments with as many positive social determinants of health as possible is just as much a health intervention as testing high risk populations, distributing condoms, encouraging safe sexual practices, etc. It’s not an either/or issue. Multi-sector partners are necessary to address all of these issues, and MAPP is a great vehicle to bring them together.

Michael O. Royster