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Fall 2003
Vol.1 | No. 2
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Imagine
going to the emergency room with a painful condition and being unable
to make yourself fully understood by the health care team due to a language
barrier. It happens every day in this country. In fact, a large body
of published research shows that language barriers, in part, explain
why racial and ethnic minorities experience a lower quality of health
services and are less likely to receive even routine medical procedures
than are white Americans.
Last year I had the honor of being asked to be co-vice chair of an Institute
of Medicine (IOM) report examining disparities in health care. The report
was requested by the United States Congress in response to cases citing
unequal health care even when access to care and ability to pay were
not issues. The IOM is part of the distinguished National Academy of
Sciences and is charged with securing the services of eminent members
of appropriate professions in the examination of policy matters pertaining
to the health of the public.
As my own research focuses on the cardiovascular health of young African
American males, I was particularly eager to play a key role in writing
the IOM report. Chair of the committee was Dr. Alan Nelson, retired physician
and current Special Advisor to the Chief Executive Officer for the American
College of Physicians-American Society of Internal Medicine. The other
co-vice chair was Dr. Risa LaVizzo-Mourey, now Senior Vice President
of the Health Care Group at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Being on this committee and working on such a critical topic was a remarkable
experience. The committee itself was comprised of 21 diverse health care
professionals from all over the country and from a variety of leadership
backgrounds. We met monthly for more than a year.
Our charge from Congress was specific. We were to:
Assess the extent of racial and ethnic differences in health care;
Evaluate potential sources of racial and ethnic disparities in health
care, including the role of bias, discrimination, and stereotyping at
the individual, institutional and health systems levels; and
Provide recommendations regarding interventions to eliminate health
care disparities.
After months of reviewing the literature; talking with patients, advocates,
professional societies, government agencies, and providers; and studying
the data and writing, our committee released a report called Unequal
Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care.
We found that racial and ethnic disparities in health care do indeed
exist and, because they are associated with worse outcomes in many cases,
are unacceptable. We also found that bias, stereotyping, prejudice, and
clinical uncertainty on the part of providers may contribute to racial
and ethnic disparities in health care.
As the report was being written, I began thinking about the role nurses
can play in reducing health disparities. Nurses are well-positioned to
take the lead in developing an action agenda with the goal of eliminating
unequal treatment.
Many Johns Hopkins nurses are already active in education, policy, practice
and research efforts that aim to reduce disparities. You can read about
some of that work in this issue of Johns Hopkins Nursing (see page 16).
A comprehensive, multi-disciplinary strategy is needed to reduce racial
and cultural disparities in health care. The IOM report has put the issues
on the table. Now it is up to us, health care providers, to devise the
solutions that will allow every resident of this country, no matter what
his or her ethnic background, to receive equal, quality health care.
To learn more about the IOM report, visit the following website: http://www.iom.edu/report.asp?id=4475
Martha N. Hill, PhD, RN, '64 Dean
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