Why is the health of African-Americans still declining?
Did you know approximately 12 percent (34.7 million) of the U.S.
population is African American (3). Compared with white
Americans, they are less likely to have private or
employment-based health insurance, more likely to be covered by
Medicaid or other publicly funded insurance, and twice as likely
to be uninsured, even though eight of 10 are in working
families. A disproportionate percentage of African Americans are
employed in jobs that do not provide health insurance. Many
African Americans, especially those who are poor and those
working without health care benefits, are less likely than white
Americans to have a usual source of health care (2). Health
Disparities The health disparity for African Americans compared
to white Americans have not changed over the last 40 years,
although overall reductions in excess death rates occurred for
all ages and gender groups. Medicaid and Medicare have
contributed to better health care and health status for many
African Americans, yet the overall gap in mortality has not
changed dramatically, and the infant mortality rate has worsened
(1). Why is this? The state of healthcare for African Americans
is getting worse and not better. The access to healthcare and
quality healthcare for the race is becoming an epidemic and
needs the attention of the politicians, leaders, and physicians.
Health Care costs The cost of treating the uninsured and
underinsured has also risen. The uninsured come in all shapes,
sizes, and colors. On the provider side of the coin, hospitals
and healthcare systems have tried to provide access to health
care for the population and have reported substantial operating
losses and uncompensated care balances that effect the
profitability of the organization. The strategic planning and
the marketing of insured patients to offset the loss of the
African Americans have been positively initiated in health care
organizations around the nation. Health Status The disease
epidemics for African Americans are also at an all time high.
For example, obesity, cancer, diabetes, hypertension, coronary
heart disease, and cerebrovascular disease are interrelated risk
factors for African American women (4). Other interconnections
to poorer health and lower life expectancy in African Americans
are lifestyle habits such as smoking, diet, lack of physical
exercise; life stress; occupational conditions; and individual
and systemic barriers to preventive health care. The ability to
educate the African American community regarding these
epidemics, access to healthcare, preventative care, and
lifestyle changes will help to raise the health status of our
culture. By Vernita Davis-Knight, MS
1. Satcher, D., Fryer, G. E., McCann, J., Troutman, A., Woolf,
S. H., & Rust, G. (2005). What if we were equal? A comparison of
the black-white mortality gap in 1960 and 2000. Health Affairs,
24, 459- 464.
2. Smedley, B. D., Stith, A.Y., & Nelson, A. R. (Eds.),
Committee on Understanding and Eliminating Racial and Ethnic
Disparities in Health Care. (2003). Unequal treatment:
Confronting racial and ethnic disparities in healthcare.
Washington, DC: National Academies Press. 3. U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services. (1999). Mental health: A report oj
the surgeon general. Rockville, MD: National Institutes of
Health, National Institute of Mental Health, Center for Mental
Health Services and Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration. 4. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
National Cancer Institute. (2003, January). In Cancer in women
of color (K. Glanz, Ed., Monograph). Bethesda, MD: Author.