In the
United States, the health of African-Americans lags behind most other racial
minority groups. Compared to whites,
black men and women face higher risks of chronic illness, infection, and
injuries. Taken altogether, the average
life span for African Americans is 6 years less compared to whites. If we can begin to acknowledge that health
outcomes are often dependent on factors outside of the control of individual
patients, their physicians, or their health coverage, then we can begin to
understand why reforming the healthcare system is proving to be an indomitable
task.
The
strongest predictor of health is socioeconomic status (SES.) While financial instability is considered the
fundamental cause of health disparities, this association between socioeconomic
status and health is dependent upon race.
For
instance, the mortality rate for babies born to black mothers with a masters or
doctorate degree is far worse than the mortality rate for babies born to white mothers
with less than an 8th grade education. And black women are far less
likely to have breast cancer, yet are 40 percent more likely to die from it.
These differences
in mortality rate are unrelated
to socioeconomic status. Actually, health
disparities are paradoxically greater between middle to upper class African
Americans when compared to middle to upper class whites. Why does upward mobility so minimally alter
the health status of African Americans in particular?
This has
been a topic of much scientific debate.
One possibility is that different genetics lead to different outcomes;
however, the degree of health disparity with regard to race does not hold true for
most other countries of the world. A
more likely factor is that financial stability does not guarantee fewer
encounters with discrimination. And, in
fact, racial minorities report unfair treatment more frequently in higher SES
than lower SES groups.
Structural
racism is the biased societal approach to housing, education, employment,
healthcare, and criminal justice. As scientists
study racial health disparities in depth, a picture begins to emerge that there
are bigger, stronger, and more insidious forces at play than economics alone. The
psychological stress generated by unfair treatment may trigger a biological series
of events that lead to worsened health outcomes in the long term.
For instance,
in the six months after September 11, 2001, women living in California who were
of Arab descent were far more likely to give birth to a low birthweight or
preterm infant than in the six-month time period prior to September 11. As a group, Arab-American women consistently have
low rates of low birthweight or preterm infants. These findings lend support to
the possibility that increased activation of the stress response system has a
tangible effect on health outcomes.
In addition,
there is a growing body of evidence that shows it is the chronicity rather than
the severity of exposure to unfair treatment that most strongly correlates with
higher morbidity or mortality rates. It makes sense that over a lifetime,
repetitive discriminatory encounters can exact a heavy toll. In order to address the root cause of racial
health disparities, we need to take an honest look back at previous attempts of
the government to care for marginalized minority populations.
One example
is “The Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the African American,” conducted
by the U.S. Public Health Service between 1932 and 1972. In collaboration with Tuskegee University—a
historically black college in Alabama—600 impoverished African American sharecroppers
from Macon County, Alabama were enrolled in a study with the purpose of
observing the progression of untreated syphilis while providing free healthcare
to the underserved.
By 1947,
penicillin had become the standard treatment for syphilis, yet researchers continued
to observe the ill men while intentionally withholding antibiotic treatment. No care was provided when the men went blind,
insane, or experienced severe complications.
By the time this unethical study was terminated in 1972, 28 men had died
from syphilis, 100 more had succumbed to complications of the disease, 40 spouses
contracted the disease, and 19 children had been born with congenital syphilis. All victims were African American.
President
Bill Clinton issued a formal apology to the Tuskegee victims on behalf of the
US Government on May 16, 1997:
“What was done cannot
be undone. But we can end the
silence. We can stop turning our heads
away…what the US government did was shameful, and I am sorry…it is in
remembering the past that we can build a better present and a better future.”
More than
twenty years later have we really built a better future?
In a word,
no. Today, a black woman is 22% more
likely to die from heart disease than a white woman. A black woman is 71% more likely to die from
cervical cancer than a white woman. A
black woman is 243% more likely to die from pregnancy or childbirth-related
causes than a white woman.
Even after
controlling for age, gender, marital status, region of residence, employment
status and insurance coverage, African Americans have worse health outcomes
than whites in nearly every illness category.
Expanding healthcare coverage is more of a temporary Band-Aid than a
long-term solution. Instead, reducing racial health disparity requires
acknowledging the affects structural racism has on health status and then working
toward sweeping, trans-formative change in our society as a whole.
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