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1.
Nurs Outlook ; 72(6): 102264, 2024 Sep 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39305532

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Social and health inequities and inequalities are rising all over the world (Chinn & Falk-Rafael, 2018; McGibbon et al., 2014; Smtih, 2012). Nursing students should therefore be educated to understand the multifaceted factors creating health inequities and the degree to which non-biological elements can be embodied and become biological (e.g., environmental stress leading to changes in health.). PURPOSE: We suggest pathways to decolonize nursing curricula and pedagogy through decentering the colonial knowledge structures and practices that harm Indigenous health and wellbeing. METHODS: This discursive analysis utilizes decolonial theory and postcolonial feminism. DISCUSSION: Colonization, broadly speaking, characterizes the Eurocentric project to "civilize" the rest of the world utilizing various forms of violence (McGibbon et. al., 2014). The persistent and ongoing reproduction and recurrence of colonialism, enacting cycles of disenfranchisement and oppression, creates significant inequities in physical, mental, and emotional health and well-being for historically marginalized groups of people (Smith, 2012). CONCLUSION: The need for innovative undergraduate nursing curricula reform is apparent. The lack of nursing courses highlighting the effects of colonization, environmental justice, upstream structural and social determinants of health, globalization, and state violence must be addressed. Because gaps in nursing curricula and outdated teaching practices may support persistent inequities, scholars and students have advocated for decolonization of nursing curricula (Chinn & Falk-Rafael, 2018; McGibbon et al., 2014; Smtih, 2012).

4.
J Med Ethics ; 41(5): 367-70, 2015 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24899522

RESUMEN

HIV-positive individuals have traditionally been barred from donating organs due to transmission concerns, but this barrier may soon be lifted in the USA in limited settings when recipients are also infected with HIV. Recipients of livers and kidneys with well-controlled HIV infection have been shown to have similar outcomes to those without HIV, erasing ethical concerns about poorly chosen beneficiaries of precious organs. But the question of whether HIV-negative patients should be disallowed from receiving an organ from an HIV-positive donor has not been adequately explored. In this essay, we will discuss the background to this scenario and the ethical implications of its adoption from the perspectives of autonomy, beneficence/non-maleficence and justice.


Asunto(s)
Terapia Antirretroviral Altamente Activa , Beneficencia , Seronegatividad para VIH , Seropositividad para VIH , Trasplante de Órganos/ética , Autonomía Personal , Justicia Social , Donantes de Sangre/legislación & jurisprudencia , Seropositividad para VIH/tratamiento farmacológico , Hepatitis C/transmisión , Homosexualidad , Humanos , Trasplante de Riñón/ética , Trasplante de Hígado/ética , Masculino , Medición de Riesgo , Justicia Social/ética , Justicia Social/tendencias , Estados Unidos , United States Food and Drug Administration
5.
Ann Surg ; 259(5): 833-41, 2014 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24722222

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: To determine and compare outcomes with accepted benchmarks in burn care at 6 academic burn centers. BACKGROUND: Since the 1960s, US morbidity and mortality rates have declined tremendously for burn patients, likely related to improvements in surgical and critical care treatment. We describe the baseline patient characteristics and well-defined outcomes for major burn injuries. METHODS: We followed 300 adults and 241 children from 2003 to 2009 through hospitalization, using standard operating procedures developed at study onset. We created an extensive database on patient and injury characteristics, anatomic and physiological derangement, clinical treatment, and outcomes. These data were compared with existing benchmarks in burn care. RESULTS: Study patients were critically injured, as demonstrated by mean % total body surface area (TBSA) (41.2 ± 18.3 for adults and 57.8 ± 18.2 for children) and presence of inhalation injury in 38% of the adults and 54.8% of the children. Mortality in adults was 14.1% for those younger than 55 years and 38.5% for those aged 55 years and older. Mortality in patients younger than 17 years was 7.9%. Overall, the multiple organ failure rate was 27%. When controlling for age and % TBSA, presence of inhalation injury continues to be significant. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides the current benchmark for major burn patients. Mortality rates, notwithstanding significant % TBSA and presence of inhalation injury, have significantly declined compared with previous benchmarks. Modern day surgical and medically intensive management has markedly improved to the point where we can expect patients younger than 55 years with severe burn injuries and inhalation injury to survive these devastating conditions.


Asunto(s)
Benchmarking , Quemaduras/terapia , Cuidados Críticos/métodos , Insuficiencia Multiorgánica/epidemiología , Adolescente , Adulto , Distribución por Edad , Quemaduras/diagnóstico , Quemaduras/mortalidad , Enfermedad Crítica , Femenino , Estudios de Seguimiento , Mortalidad Hospitalaria/tendencias , Humanos , Incidencia , Tiempo de Internación/tendencias , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Insuficiencia Multiorgánica/etiología , Estudios Prospectivos , Estudios Retrospectivos , Índices de Gravedad del Trauma , Estados Unidos/epidemiología , Adulto Joven
6.
Lancet ; 391(10120): 534, 2018 02 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29617235
7.
Soc Sci Med ; 361: 117332, 2024 Sep 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39332316

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Social medicine, a field of study that uniquely centers the social and structural drivers of health in society, has been increasingly integrated into medical professional education over the last several decades. In Palestine, due to the fragmentation of Palestinian geographies, education, culture, and health, integrating a social medicine approach for allied health care students has remained elusive. We seek to introduce the theoretical underpinnings and practical implementation of an experiential Palestine social medicine course. MATERIALS AND METHODS: 30 Students from the Gaza Strip, West Bank, and the United States convened at the Institute of Community and Public Health at Birzeit University, Palestine, for a three-week experiential social medicine course. The course introduced critical social and structural frameworks and utilized a biosocial model for training and education that included reflective knowledge acquisition and praxis. Pre- and post-course evaluations provided feedback and insight into the knowledge, attitudes, and learning evolution of the student cohort. RESULTS: Participant experiences highlighted the importance of the critical reflective nature of the course and importance of practice through praxis. Students identified the convening of Palestinians from different regions and the focus on Palestinian-centered perspectives as foundational for the course. Tensions highlighted included the challenges and distress in identifying tangible next steps in addressing the identified structural determinants of Palestinian health. CONCLUSION: The Palestine social medicine course provided a Palestinian narrative-centered course that focused on critical structural frameworks to identify and clarify the overarching connections of various, fractured Palestinian health experiences. This course provides a model, and first step, towards meaningful decolonial education, partnership, and praxis, while also providing further evidence of the power of mobilizing in health solidarity and the transformative power of the social medicine movement.

8.
Health Equity ; 8(1): 371-375, 2024.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39011074

RESUMEN

Between October 2023 and April 2024, more than 30,000 Palestinians were killed, and countless others injured, displaced, and traumatized, in the fifth major Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip since 2006. Recent events, along with the trajectory of events over the past 75 years, demonstrate that using a public health framework could help recognize racism as a structural and social determinant of Palestinian health. Using the principles of health equity, we show how Palestinian health inequities are rooted in settler colonialism and racism, amounting to violence and oppression against Palestinian Arabs as a racialized group, regardless of religion or citizenship. Structural racism should be recognized as a driver of Palestinian health inequities.

9.
PLOS Glob Public Health ; 4(10): e0003178, 2024.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39387878

RESUMEN

After attacks in Israel led by Hamas militants on October 7, 2023, Israel launched a major military campaign in the Gaza Strip that has featured an unprecedented scale of destruction. This has included the use of highly destructive weapons in a densely populated area. Mark-84 bombs (M-84s) are 2000 lb air-dropped explosive munitions with the capacity to damage infrastructure and kill or cause severe injury hundreds of meters away. This study examines the proximity of M-84 bomb detonations to hospital infrastructure in the Gaza Strip. We combined geospatial data on hospital locations across the Gaza Strip with maps of the locations of M-84 bomb craters between October 7 and November 17, 2023, published by CNN and New York Times. We then measured and summarized the proximity of the bomb craters to hospitals across the territory. We identified 592 M-84 bomb craters. Of the 36 hospitals across the Gaza Strip, 25% (n = 9) had at least one bomb crater within the lethal range (360 m) and 83.3% (n = 30) within the infrastructure damage and injury range (800 m) of their facilities. The shortest distance of a bomb crater from a hospital was 14.7 m. Two hospitals had as many as 23 and 21 bomb craters within 800 m of their facilities and one hospital had seven bomb craters within 360 m. Thirty-eight M-84 bombs were detonated within 800 m of hospitals in the Israeli military defined evacuation zone. Given the known blast effect of these M-84 bombs, the impact from the bomb detonations near hospitals likely killed and injured people in and around the hospital area, which could include civilians and hospital staff, and likely damaged hospital infrastructure. The results of this study suggest indiscriminate bombing in dangerous proximities to hospital infrastructure, which is afforded special protection under international humanitarian law (IHL).

10.
JAMA Netw Open ; 7(9): e2433429, 2024 Sep 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39283638

RESUMEN

Importance: Emergency department (ED) boarding times have increased rapidly, but their health equity outcomes are unknown. Objective: To investigate whether prolonged ED boarding is associated with increased perceived racial discrimination and dissatisfaction and whether associations vary between patients from marginalized racial and ethnic groups vs non-Hispanic White patients. Design, Setting, and Participants: This is a cross-sectional study of hospitalized adults who boarded in the ED during internal medicine admissions at a large, urban hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, from June 2023 to January 2024. Equal proportions of non-Hispanic White patients and patients from marginalized racial and ethnic groups (American Indian or Alaska Native, Hispanic, non-Hispanic Black and/or African American, and multiracial) were selected randomly. Exposure: The duration of ED boarding was categorized as less than 4 hours (reference), 4 to less than 24 hours, and 24 or more hours. Main Outcomes and Measures: Primary outcomes were odds of reporting (1) discrimination via the Discrimination in Medical Settings scale, and (2) dissatisfaction via the adapted Picker Patient Experience-15 questionnaire. Marginalized race and ethnicity was tested as an effect modifier. Multivariable logistic regression models adjusted for patient age, sex, language, and insurance payer. Results: Of 598 patients approached, 527 were enrolled, and 525 completed the surveys (response rate, 87.8%). The mean age (SD) was 60.6 (18.7) years, 300 patients (57.1%) were female, 246 patients (47.3%) identified as non-Hispanic White, and 274 (52.7%) were from a marginalized racial or ethnic group. In total, 135 (25.7%) boarded less than 4 hours (reference), 202 (38.5%) boarded 4 to less than 24 hours, and 188 (35.8%) boarded 24 hours or longer. Compared with less than 4 hours, boarding 24 hours or longer was associated with increased perceived discrimination (odds ratio [OR], 1.84; 95% CI, 1.14-2.99; P = .01). An increased association was observed in the subgroup of patients from racial and ethnic marginalized groups (OR, 2.36; 95% CI, 1.20-4.65; P = .01); effect modification was not significant (P for interaction, .10). For all patients, boarding 24 hours or longer was associated with increased dissatisfaction with care (OR, 1.77; 95% CI, 1.03-3.06; P = .04); effect modification was not significant (P for interaction, .80). Conclusions and Relevance: In this cross-sectional study, hospitalized patients who boarded in the ED 24 hours or longer reported more discrimination and dissatisfaction with care, which may disproportionately affect patients from marginalized racial and ethnic groups. As ED boarding times increase nationally, it is critical to recognize their potential to exacerbate health inequities and to respond with equity-focused solutions.


Asunto(s)
Servicio de Urgencia en Hospital , Satisfacción del Paciente , Racismo , Humanos , Servicio de Urgencia en Hospital/estadística & datos numéricos , Racismo/psicología , Racismo/estadística & datos numéricos , Femenino , Masculino , Estudios Transversales , Persona de Mediana Edad , Satisfacción del Paciente/estadística & datos numéricos , Satisfacción del Paciente/etnología , Adulto , Anciano , Boston , Factores de Tiempo
11.
Confl Health ; 18(1): 24, 2024 Apr 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38566118

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Since the Hamas attacks in Israel on 7 October 2023, the Israeli military has launched an assault in the Gaza Strip, which included over 12,000 targets struck and over 25,000 tons of incendiary munitions used by 2 November 2023. The objectives of this study include: (1) the descriptive and inferential spatial analysis of damage to critical civilian infrastructure (health, education, and water facilities) across the Gaza Strip during the first phase of the military campaign, defined as 7 October to 22 November 2023 and (2) the analysis of damage clustering around critical civilian infrastructure to explore broader questions about Israel's adherence to International Humanitarian Law (IHL). METHODS: We applied multi-temporal coherent change detection on Copernicus Sentinel 1-A Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery to detect signals indicative of damage to the built environment through 22 November 2023. Specific locations of health, education, and water facilities were delineated using open-source building footprint and cross-checked with geocoded data from OCHA, OpenStreetMap, and Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team. We then assessed the retrieval of damage at and with close proximity to sites of health, education, and water infrastructure in addition to designated evacuation corridors and civilian protection zones. The Global Moran's I autocorrelation inference statistic was used to determine whether health, education, and water facility infrastructure damage was spatially random or clustered. RESULTS: During the period under investigation, in the entire Gaza Strip, 60.8% (n = 59) of health, 68.2% (n = 324) of education, and 42.1% (n = 64) of water facilities sustained infrastructure damage. Furthermore, 35.1% (n = 34) of health, 40.2% (n = 191) of education, and 36.8% (n = 56) of water facilities were functionally destroyed. Applying the Global Moran's I spatial inference statistic to facilities demonstrated a high degree of damage clustering for all three types of critical civilian infrastructure, with Z-scores indicating < 1% likelihood of cluster damage occurring by random chance. CONCLUSION: Spatial statistical analysis suggests widespread damage to critical civilian infrastructure that should have been provided protection under IHL. These findings raise serious allegations about the violation of IHL, especially in light of Israeli officials' statements explicitly inciting violence and displacement and multiple widely reported acts of collective punishment.

12.
Perspect Biol Med ; 56(2): 236-43, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23974503

RESUMEN

In the late 1990s, three prominent figures of 20th-century medicine-Paul Beeson, Howard Burchell, and Shimon Glick-exchanged private letters on the ethics of experimentation in the years following World War II. What began as a brief published back-and-forth blossomed into a long correspondence filled with humor and wisdom even in the face of continued disagreement. The history of postwar investigation unfolds memorably in their letters, starting with the whistleblowing of Beecher and Pappworth and moving into the 21st century. The heart of the discussion focuses on the ethics of consent and legitimate risk in clinical investigation, and on the prevalence of violations of patients' rights. Glick openly discusses his views about the widespread practice of their subjection to experiments without benefit or unrelated to their conditions. In opposition, Burchell claims that accusations of ethical misconduct during this period were exaggerated, and that most of these studies would pass review boards today. Just when things seem to reach an immutable impasse, Beeson weighs in with keen insight and personal experience. The debate provides not only an intimate perspective on some of the most influential physician investigators of the last half-century, but also a context for productively approaching ethical questions of today.


Asunto(s)
Ética Médica , Medicina Militar , Médicos , Historia del Siglo XX , Segunda Guerra Mundial
13.
Arch Gynecol Obstet ; 288(4): 725-30, 2013 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23934241

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The association between inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and preterm delivery is controversial. Study size, quality, and design have been inconsistent, making it difficult to assess the relationship between IBD and preterm delivery. OBJECTIVE: Utilizing a systematic search of Pubmed for all relevant literature, this review seeks to clarify the correlation between IBD and preterm delivery and to assess the impact of disease activity and medication usage on this outcome. RESULTS: The available evidence is inadequate to make any robust claims about the association between IBD and preterm delivery. IBD in pregnant women may represent a risk for preterm delivery, and it is probable that IBD activity augments this risk. Many of the medications used to treat IBD also have a correlation with preterm delivery. CONCLUSIONS: While an association between IBD and preterm delivery may exist, further well-designed prospective studies are necessary to determine how the course and management of disease may impact this outcome.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades Inflamatorias del Intestino/complicaciones , Nacimiento Prematuro/etiología , Antiinflamatorios/efectos adversos , Antiinflamatorios/uso terapéutico , Femenino , Humanos , Enfermedades Inflamatorias del Intestino/tratamiento farmacológico , Embarazo , Complicaciones del Embarazo/tratamiento farmacológico , Índice de Severidad de la Enfermedad
14.
Lancet Glob Health ; 11(9): e1469-e1474, 2023 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37591594

RESUMEN

This Viewpoint considers the implications of incorporating two interdisciplinary and burgeoning fields of study, settler colonialism and racial capitalism, as prominent frameworks within academic global health. We describe these two modes of domination and their historical and ongoing roles in creating accumulated advantage for some groups and disadvantage for others, highlighting their relevance for decolonial health approaches. We argue that widespread epistemic and material injustice, long noted by marginalised communities, is more apparent and challengeable with the consistent application of these two frameworks. With examples from the USA, Brazil, and Zimbabwe, we describe the health effects of settler colonial erasure and racial capitalist exploitation, also revealing the rich legacies of resistance that highlight potential paths towards health equity. Because much of the global health knowledge production is constructed from unregenerate contexts of settler colonialism and racial capitalism and yet focused transnationally, we offer instead an approach of bidirectional decoloniality. Recognising the broader colonial world system at work, bidirectional decoloniality entails a truly global health community that confronts Global North settler colonialism and racial injustice as forcefully as the various colonialisms perpetrated in the Global South.


Asunto(s)
Capitalismo , Equidad en Salud , Humanos , Colonialismo , Salud Global , Brasil
15.
Front Public Health ; 11: 1137428, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37533522

RESUMEN

Indigenous people suffer earlier death and more frequent and severe disease than their settler counterparts, a remarkably persistent reality over time, across settler colonized geographies, and despite their ongoing resistance to elimination. Although these health inequities are well-known, they have been impervious to comprehensive and convincing explication, let alone remediation. Settler colonial studies, a fast-growing multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary field, is a promising candidate to rectify this impasse. Settler colonialism's relationship to health inequity is at once obvious and incompletely described, a paradox arising from epistemic coloniality and perceived analytic challenges that we address here in three parts. First, in considering settler colonialism an enduring structure rather than a past event, and by wedding this fundamental insight to the ascendant structural paradigm for understanding health inequities, a picture emerges in which this system of power serves as a foundational and ongoing configuration determining social and political mechanisms that impose on human health. Second, because modern racialization has served to solidify and maintain the hierarchies of colonial relations, settler colonialism adds explanatory power to racism's health impacts and potential amelioration by historicizing this process for differentially racialized groups. Finally, advances in structural racism methodologies and the work of a few visionary scholars have already begun to elucidate the possibilities for a body of literature linking settler colonialism and health, illuminating future research opportunities and pathways toward the decolonization required for health equity.


Asunto(s)
Equidad en Salud , Pueblos Indígenas , Humanos , Colonialismo
16.
Glob Public Health ; 18(1): 2214608, 2023 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37209155

RESUMEN

Palestinian citizens of Israel (PCI) constitute almost 20% of the Israeli population. Despite having access to one of the most efficient healthcare systems in the world, PCI have shorter life expectancy and significantly worse health outcomes compared to the Jewish Israeli population. While several studies have analysed the social and policy determinants driving these health inequities, direct discussion of structural racism as their overarching etiology has been limited. This article situates the social determinants of health of PCI and their health outcomes as stemming from settler colonialism and resultant structural racism by exploring how Palestinians came to be a racialized minority in their homeland. In utilising critical race theory and a settler colonial analysis, we provide a structural and historically responsible reading of the health of PCI and suggest that dismantling legally codified racial discrimination is the first step to achieving health equity.


Asunto(s)
Árabes , Racismo , Humanos , Israel , Racismo Sistemático , Población Blanca
17.
Glob Health Sci Pract ; 10(5)2022 Oct 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36316145

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Community health worker (CHW) programs have proven effective in improving diabetes control in many locations and settings, but data on feasibility and efficacy are lacking in the Middle East and settings of chronic violence. A Palestinian CHW program, Health for Palestine (H4P), addresses chronic diseases in West Bank refugee camps. Our study assesses the feasibility and effectiveness of the program's diabetes and hypertension interventions. METHODS: Data on home visits, patient retention, and blood pressure were extracted from the CHW records and analyzed. To assess diabetic patient progress, we conducted a retrospective matched cohort study using data obtained from a United Nations (UN) clinical database to analyze the trajectory of hemoglobin A1c (A1c) values. Thirty of the 47 diabetic patients in the H4P CHW program met study inclusion criteria and were each matched with 3 patients from the Bethlehem UN clinic (n=120). We tested for significance using multivariable linear regression with robust standard errors. RESULTS: The average number of home visits per patient per month was 7.3 (standard deviation=4.1), and the patient retention rate was 100% over an average of 11.2 months. For hypertension patients in the CHW program (n=33), mean systolic blood pressure decreased by 7.3 mmHg (95% confidence interval [CI]=1.93, 12.25; P=.009) and mean diastolic blood pressure by 4.3 mmHg (95% CI=0.80, 7.91; P=.018) from March 2018 to November 2019. On average, diabetic patients within the CHW group experienced a 1.4 point greater decline in A1c per year compared to those in the non-CHW group, after adjusting for potential confounders (95% CI=-0.66, -2.1; P<.001). DISCUSSION: The results suggest that CHW accompaniment may be an effective model for improving diabetes and hypertension control in refugee camps experiencing direct violence and extreme adversity. A low exclusion cut-off for A1c (≤6.4%) may underestimate the program's impact.


Asunto(s)
Diabetes Mellitus , Hipertensión , Humanos , Agentes Comunitarios de Salud , Hemoglobina Glucada/análisis , Campos de Refugiados , Estudios de Cohortes , Estudios Retrospectivos , Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiología , Diabetes Mellitus/terapia , Hipertensión/terapia
18.
JAMA Netw Open ; 5(11): e2240519, 2022 11 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36342718

RESUMEN

Importance: In the US, Black individuals die younger than White individuals and have less household wealth, a legacy of slavery, ongoing discrimination, and discriminatory public policies. The role of wealth inequality in mediating racial health inequities is unclear. Objective: To assess the contribution of wealth inequities to the longevity gap that exists between Black and White individuals in the US and to model the potential effects of reparations payments on this gap. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study analyzed the association between wealth and survival among participants in the Health and Retirement Study, a nationally representative panel study of community-dwelling noninstitutionalized US adults 50 years or older that assessed data collected from April 1992 to July 2019. Participants included 7339 non-Hispanic Black (hereinafter Black) and 26 162 non-Hispanic White (hereinafter White) respondents. Data were analyzed from January 1 to September 17, 2022. Exposures: Household wealth, the sum of all assets (including real estate, vehicles, and investments), minus the value of debts. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was all-cause mortality by the end of survey follow-up in 2018. Using parametric survival models, the associations among household wealth, race, and survival were evaluated, adjusting for age, sex, number of household members, and marital status. Additional models controlled for educational level and income. The survival effects of eliminating the current mean wealth gap with reparations payments ($828 055 per household) were simulated. Results: Of the 33 501 individuals in the sample, a weighted 50.1% were women, and weighted mean (SD) age at study entry was 59.3 (11.1) years. Black participants' median life expectancy was 77.5 (95% CI, 77.0-78.2) years, 4 years shorter than the median life expectancy for White participants (81.5 [95% CI, 81.2-81.8] years). Adjusting for demographic variables, Black participants had a hazard ratio for death of 1.26 (95% CI, 1.18-1.34) compared with White participants. After adjusting for differences in wealth, survival did not differ significantly by race (hazard ratio, 1.00 [95% CI, 0.92-1.08]). In simulations, reparations to close the mean racial wealth gap were associated with reductions in the longevity gap by 65.0% to 102.5%. Conclusions and Relevance: The findings of this cohort study suggest that differences in wealth are associated with the longevity gap that exists between Black and White individuals in the US. Reparations payments to eliminate the racial wealth gap might substantially narrow racial inequities in mortality.


Asunto(s)
Población Negra , Etnicidad , Adulto , Femenino , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad , Masculino , Estudios de Cohortes , Factores Socioeconómicos , Renta
19.
Food Nutr Bull ; 32(1 Suppl): S4-13, 2011 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21717913

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Macronutrient and micronutrient deficiencies continue to have a detrimental impact in lower-income countries, with significant costs in morbidity, mortality, and productivity. Food is the primary source of the nutrients needed to sustain life, and it is the essential component that links nutrition, agriculture, and ecology in the econutrition framework. OBJECTIVE: To present evidence and analysis of food-based approaches for improving nutritional and health outcomes in lower-income countries. METHODS: Review of existing literature. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The benefits of food-based approaches may include nutritional improvement, food security, cost-effectiveness, sustainability, and human productivity. Food-based approaches require additional inputs, including nutrition education, gender considerations, and agricultural planning. Although some forms of malnutrition can be addressed via supplements, food-based approaches are optimal to achieve sustainable solutions to multiple nutrient deficiencies.


Asunto(s)
Alimentos/estadística & datos numéricos , Fenómenos Fisiológicos de la Nutrición , Estado Nutricional , Pobreza , Salud Pública , Agricultura , Análisis Costo-Beneficio , Productos Agrícolas , Países en Desarrollo , Suplementos Dietéticos , Salud , Humanos , Desnutrición/mortalidad , Desnutrición/prevención & control , Micronutrientes/deficiencia
20.
Cureus ; 13(2): e13381, 2021 Feb 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33628703

RESUMEN

Background Racial inequities in mortality and readmission for heart failure (HF) are well documented. Inequitable access to specialized cardiology care during admissions may contribute to inequity, and the drivers of this inequity are poorly understood. Methodology This prospective observational study explored proposed drivers of racial inequities in cardiology admissions among Black, Latinx, and white adults presenting to the emergency department (ED) with symptoms of HF. Surveys of ED providers examined perceptions of patient self-advocacy, outreach to other clinicians (e.g., outpatient cardiologist), diagnostic uncertainty, and other active co-morbid conditions. Service census, bed availability, prior admission service, and other structural factors were explored through the electronic medical record. Results Complete data were available for 61/135 patients admitted with HF during the study period, which halted early due to coronavirus disease 2019. No significant differences emerged in admission to cardiology versus medicine based on age, sex, insurance status, education level, or perceived race/ethnicity. White patients were perceived as advocating for admission to cardiology more frequently (18.9 vs. 5.6%) and more strenuously than Black patients (p = 0.097). ED clinicians more often reported having spoken with the patient's outpatient cardiologist for whites than for Black or Latinx patients (24.3 vs. 16.7%, p = 0.069). Conclusions Theorized drivers of racial inequities in admission service did not reach statistical significance, possibly due to underpowering, the Hawthorne effect, or clinician behavior change based on knowledge of previously identified inequities. The observed trend towards racial differences in coordination of care between ED and outpatient providers, as well as in either actual or perceived self-advocacy by patients, may be as-yet undemonstrated components of structural racism driving HF care inequities.

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