Town Hall Focuses on
Health Care Disparities

The School of Nursing’s year-long Milestone Celebration
closed with “Who Will Care for Us? Who Will Receive Care?”,
an expert-to-expert town hall. Health care experts and legislators
shared their perspectives on causes, results, and solutions regarding
the pervasive health care disparities now affecting millions of people
throughout the United States.
The event, held Tuesday, May 3, 2005, at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Nursing, was hosted by Dean Martha Hill and moderated by ABC
News correspondent Sam Donaldson. Federal, state, and local expert panelists
included:
Dr.
Elias Zerhouni, Director, National Institutes of Health
Dr. Peter Beilenson, Health Commissioner, Baltimore City
Department of Health
The Honorable Shirley Nathan-Pulliam, Delegate, Maryland General
Assembly; Chair, Minority Health Disparities Subcommittee
Dr. Antonia M. Villarruel, Associate Professor and Director, Center
for Health Promotion, University of Michigan; Vice-President, National
Coalition of Ethnic Minority Nursing Association
Dr.
Lonnie R. Bristow, Former President, American Medical Association;
Chair, Institute of Medicine Committee on Institutional and Policy Level
Strategies for Increasing Diversity of the U.S. Healthcare Workforce
Mr.
Leo Nolan, III, Senior Policy Analyst – External Affairs
for the Office of the Director, Indian Health Service, U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services
Dr.
Lisa Egbuonu-Davis, Pfizer Scholar-in-Residence, Spelman College,
Women’s Research and Resource Center
Dean Hill described the event as both “the capstone of a Milestone
Celebration year during which Hopkins Nursing honored our past successes
and marked our current accomplishments” and “the foundation
for a future that will see the School of Nursing continue to be ranked
among the top tier of schools nationwide that are known for excellence
in community health nursing and outreach to populations in need.”
Moderator, Sam Donaldson:
Choose one element that you think
creates these disparities.
Beilenson: “Lack of
equal access to comprehensive health coverage.”
Bristow: “We are missing
the opportunity to train people who would perfectly fit what society
needs in terms of being competent and compassionate and being able
to give culturally sensitive care.”
Egbuonu-Davis: “We’re
not consistently delivering the highest quality that is evidence-based.”
Nathan-Pulliam: “Education
of health professionals. We have got to make sure that we understand
what cultural sensitivity is.”
Nolan: “Socioeconomic
infrastructure or lack thereof. Good education programs.”
Villarruel: “A lack
of moving beyond the health care system to really looking at some of
the other infrastructure, both of public health education and also
looking more at prevention.”
Zerhouni: “Connectedness. There is a connected population, which
knows about health, health literacy, knows to access it, how to access
it. And then there’s a disconnected part of our population.”