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March 24, 2005
Report: black mortality tied to health care gap
Randolph E. Schmid
WASHINGTON (AP) — Middle-age black men are dying at nearly
twice the rate of white men of a similar age, reflecting lower
incomes and poorer access to health care, a study says. But mortality
among black infants is dropping.
While overall longevity for both black and whites has improved
over the past 40 years, the gap between the races has narrowed
little, former Surgeon General David Satcher said in a paper published
Wednesday in the journal Health Affairs.
Satcher’s paper was one of several in the journal, which
is devoting most of its March/April issue to the topic of health
care discrepancies between races.
Elimination of this racial gap would prevent an estimated 83,570
early deaths annually, Satcher said.
Some 10,472 of those deaths occurred among black men who were
45 to 54 in 2000, according to research based on a death rate
of 1,060 per 100,000 black men in that age group compared with
a rate of 503 for white men.
In 1960 the rates were 1,625 for black men and 932 for white men
in that age group.
One reason for the differences is that gains in health care access
generally have not included black men unless they were older or
disabled, Satcher said. For example, when Medicare became law,
the average black man did not live long enough to become eligible,
he said.
Other factors include the relatively low incomes of black men
compared with whites, a rise in gun-related deaths among blacks,
their disproportionately high death rate from AIDS, and higher
rates of heart disease and diabetes, Satcher said.
While a gap remains, there has been progress for infants, Satcher
notes.
Deaths per 100,000 black males under 12-months fell from 5,307
in 1960 to 1,653 in 2000, he found. Comparable figures for whites
were 2,694 in 1960 and 656 in 2000.
For baby girls the infant death rate fell from 4,162 in 1960 to
1,363 in 2000 for blacks and from 2,088 to 530 for whites.
Social factors, including neighborhood quality and residential
segregation, contribute to the differences in health care, according
to a separate paper by David R. Williams of the University of
Michigan and Pamela Braboy Jackson of Indiana University.
Additional factors include education, income and health practices
such as diet, physical activity and tobacco use, they report.
“Strikingly, the homicide rate of black males in the highest
education category exceeds that of white males in the lowest education
group,” Jackson and Williams wrote.
In an accompanying paper, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., calls
on Congress and the Bush administration to act to improve health
care for minorities.
“It boggles the mind that for a generation the United States,
with all its wealth and leadership, has been the only industrialized
country in the world that does not guarantee health care to all
of its citizens,” Kennedy wrote.
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., agreed that it is
crucial to seek the goal of health security for everyone. But
his approach would differ from Kennedy’s.
“The best way to eliminate health disparities is through
improvements in the care we deliver to each patient,” wrote
Frist, a heart-lung surgeon before coming to Congress, in an accompanying
paper.
Frist said he wants to foster competition to lower health care
costs and favors proposals such as health savings accounts.
The disparities in health care are unacceptable, Frist wrote,
“They are an affront to the U.S. promise of equal opportunity
for all.”
The collection of studies echoes a report in 2002 from the Institute
of Medicine that concluded that minorities receive lower quality
health care than whites for serious conditions and routine services.
That report represented a call to action, but “little clarity
has been achieved as to who is doing what to eliminate gaps in
health status and treatment,” according to a forward published
in Health Affairs.
“Solving this national embarrassment will not be easy,”
the forward said. It was signed by Rita Lavizzo-Mourey, president
of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; William C. Richardson,
president of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation; Robert K. Ross, president
of the California Endowment and John W. Rowe, chairman of the
insurance company Aetna.
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