Chs. 7,8,9, and 10

username of me
COBH4030Chp10.pptx

Chapter 10

Community and Public Health and Racial/Ethnic Minorities

Chapter Objectives (1 of 2)

After studying this chapter, you should be able to:

Explain the concept of diversity as it describes the American people.

Explain the impact of a more diverse population in the United States as it relates to community and public health efforts.

Explain the importance of the 1985 landmark report, The Secretary’s Task Force Report on Black and Minority Health.

List the racial and ethnic categories currently used by the U.S. government in statistical activities and program administration reporting.

Chapter Objectives (2 of 2)

List some limitations related to collecting racial and ethnic health data.

Discuss selected sociodemographic characteristics of minority groups in the United States.

List and describe the six priority areas of the Race and Health Initiative.

Explain the role socioeconomic status plays in health disparities among racial and ethnic minority groups.

Define cultural and linguistic competence and the importance of each related to minority community and public health.

Introduction

Strength of America lies in diversity of people

Diversity

U.S. population

Majority – white, non-Hispanic (62.2%)

Racial or ethnic minorities (37.8%)

Racial and Ethnic Classifications

Classifications used to operationalize race and ethnicity

Race – “categorization of parts of a population based on physical appearance due to particular historical social and political forces”

Ethnicity – subcultural group within a multicultural society; six main features

Health Data Sources and Their Limitations

Challenges to collection of race and ethnicity data

Unreliability of self-reported data

Classifications are social constructs that change over time and vary across societies and cultures

Biased analysis

HHS – works to increase reliability of data and amount of data collected

Americans of Hispanic Origin

Hispanic origin is an ethnicity, not a race

Largest minority group in U.S.

People of Mexican origin largest Hispanic group

Education

Income

Health beliefs

African Americans

People having origins in any of the black racial groups from Africa

2nd largest minority group in U.S.

More than ½ live in southern states

Education

Income

Impact of slavery

Health beliefs

Asian Americans

Asian Americans – people of Asian descent who trace their roots to more than 20 different Asian countries

Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islanders (NHOPI) – peoples of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands and their descendants

Immigration

Education

Income

Health beliefs

American Indians and Alaska Natives

Original inhabitants of America

Many different American Indian tribal groups and Alaskan villages, each with distinct customs, languages, and beliefs

Relatively poor health status

Indian Health Service

U.S. Gov’t, Native Americans, and Provision of Health Care

Many tribes are sovereign nations

Tribes transferred land in U.S. to federal government in return for provision of certain services

Indian Health Services (IHS)

Responsible for federal health services to Native Americans and Alaska Natives

Goal to raise health status to highest possible level

Immigrant and Refugee Health

Refugees

Immigrants

Aliens

Unauthorized immigrants

Can be classified into existing racial/ethnic groups; as a single group, present special concerns

Minority Health and Health Disparities

Minority Health

Health Disparities

Federal efforts to eliminate health disparities

Race and Health Initiative

Goal: eliminate disparities among racial and ethnic minority populations in six areas

Infant mortality

Cancer screening and management

Cardiovascular disease

Diabetes

HIV/AIDS

Adult and child immunization

Infant Mortality

Serious disparity in U.S. among racial and ethnic minorities

African American infant death rate more than two times that of white Americans

Lack of prenatal care

Low-birth-weight babies

Data from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics.Mathews TJ, MacDorman MF. Infant mortality statistics from the 2010 period linked birth/infant death data set. Natl Vital Stat Rep 2013;62(8). http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr62/nvsr62_08.pdf

Infant mortality rates by race and Hispanic origin of mother: 2000, 2005, and 2010.

Cancer Screening and Management

Incidence and death rates highest among black Americans for various types of cancer

Many disparities attributed to lifestyle factors, late diagnosis, access to health care

Less primary and secondary prevention in various minority groups

Data from: Howlader, N., A. M. Noone, M. Krapcho, et al. (eds.). SEER Cancer Statistics Review, 1975-2010, based on November 2012 SEER data submission, posted to the SEER web site, 2013. Bethesda, MD.

SEER cancer incidence and U.S. death rates, 2010, by cancer site and race.

Cardiovascular Diseases

Death rates vary widely among racial and ethnic groups

Black Americans have higher rates from CHD and stroke

Hypertension prevalence as a risk factor varies according to race/ethnicity

Black Americans tend to develop hypertension earlier in life than whites; unknown reason

Diabetes

Overall prevalence has risen in U.S. in recent years

Prevalence in those 20 and older varies in minority groups

Increase in age-adjusted death rates in all racial and ethnic groups

Significantly higher in minority groups

Data from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Age-Specific Rates of Diagnosed Diabetes per 100 Civilian, Non-Institutionalized Population, by Race and Sex, United States, 2014. 01 Dec. 2015

Age-specific rates of diagnosed diabetes per 100 civilian, non-institutionalized

population, by race and sex, United States, 2014.

HIV Infection/AIDS

Proportional distribution of AIDS cases has increased in African Americans and Hispanics

Attributed to higher prevalence of unsafe or risky health behaviors and lack of access to health care to provide early diagnosis and treatment

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2013, April.

Rates of diagnosis of HIV infection among adults and adolescents by race/

ethnicity: 2008–2012, United States.

Child and Adult Immunization Rates

Older adult immunization rates are substantially lower in minority groups, even though an overall increase has occurred

Social Determinants of Health and Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health (1 of 2)

Many factors contribute to health disparities

Strong associations between social determinants of health factors and health outcomes

Education, level of income, poverty

Data from: National Center for Health Statistics. Health, United States, 2012: With Special Feature on Emergency Care. Hyattsville, MD. 2013.

Data from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Use of Race and Ethnicity in Public Health Surveillance. Summary of CDC/ASTDR Workshop. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 1993, 42(RR-10).

A framework for understanding the relationship between race and health.

Social Determinants of Health and Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health (2 of 2)

Health status by race, ethnicity, and income in 2012.

Equity in Minority Health

Simple solutions unlikely

Solutions to problems for one group may not work for another

Solutions must be culturally sensitive

Must empower individual and communities

Health literacy

Cultural Competence

A set of congruent behaviors, attitudes, and policies that come together in a system, agency, or among professionals, that enables effective work in cross-cultural situations

Culture is vital in how community health professionals deliver services and how community members respond to programs and interventions

Empowering the Self and the Community

To enable people to solve their community health problems

Three kinds of power associated with empowerment

Social – access to “bases;” needed to gain political power

Political – power of voice and collective action

Psychological – individual sense of potency

Discussion Questions

Why have there been so many changes to racial and ethnic classifications in the United States in recent decades?

How can community health programs empower minority groups?