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African Americans

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

An Analysis Of Major Issues For Culturally-Minded Professionals In Women's Health Care, Victoria Clark Apr 2019

An Analysis Of Major Issues For Culturally-Minded Professionals In Women's Health Care, Victoria Clark

Victoria Clark

Women's health care professionals, such as general physicians, obstetricians and gynecologists, midwives, nurses, and doulas, in the US need to be aware of cultural issues and disparities. Minorities and migrant women experience cultural challenges and disparities when receiving health care in the US. Without cultural sensitivity, patient care is compromised. Pregnancy and childbirth practices vary widely by culture, and potential differences in perspectives, beliefs, and treatment of these are critical issues for women’s health care professionals to study. Female genital cutting (FGC), obstetric fistulas (OF), and female cancer are also discussed in this paper.


Racism, Place, And Health Of Urban Black Elders Relationship Of Neighborhood Effects And Reaction To Discrimination On Self-Rated Health, Priscilla Ryder Jan 2015

Racism, Place, And Health Of Urban Black Elders Relationship Of Neighborhood Effects And Reaction To Discrimination On Self-Rated Health, Priscilla Ryder

Priscilla T. Ryder

As a population, older African Americans in the United States have more compromised health in terms of numbers and severity of conditions, ages at onset, and levels of physical function than European Americans of similar ages. Some of the inequality may be due to life-long exposure to institutional, interpersonal, and internalized racism. This monograph describes the results of a survey of African Americans ages 60 years and older living in Baltimore, Maryland. The study sets out to explain differences in self-rated health using report of racism, reaction to unfair treatment, and physical and psychosocial characteristics of participants? neighborhoods. Mental health, …


Why African-American Women Are At Greater Risk For Pregnancy-Related Death, Margaret Harper, Elizabeth Dugan, Mark Espeland, Anibal Martinez-Borges, Cynthia Mcquellon Feb 2014

Why African-American Women Are At Greater Risk For Pregnancy-Related Death, Margaret Harper, Elizabeth Dugan, Mark Espeland, Anibal Martinez-Borges, Cynthia Mcquellon

Elizabeth Dugan

PURPOSE: Our study aim was to identify factors that may contribute to the racial disparity in pregnancy-related mortality.

METHODS: We examined differences in severity of disease, comorbidities, and receipt of care among 608 (304 African-American and 304 white) consecutive patients of non-Hispanic ethnicity with one of three pregnancy-related morbidities (pregnancy-related hypertension, puerperal infection, and hemorrhage) from hospitals selected at random from a statewide region.

RESULTS: African-American women had more severe hypertension, lower hemoglobin concentrations preceding hemorrhage, more antepartum hospital admissions, and a higher rate of obesity. The rate of surgical intervention for hemorrhage was lower among African-Americans, although the severity …


Racial Disparity In Pregnancy-Related Mortality Following A Live Birth Outcome, Margaret Harper, Mark Espeland, Elizabeth Dugan, Robert Meyer, Kathy Lane, Sharon Williams Feb 2014

Racial Disparity In Pregnancy-Related Mortality Following A Live Birth Outcome, Margaret Harper, Mark Espeland, Elizabeth Dugan, Robert Meyer, Kathy Lane, Sharon Williams

Elizabeth Dugan

PURPOSE: African-American women have a 2- to 4-fold increased risk of pregnancy-related death compared with Caucasian women. We conducted this study to determine if differences in a combination of socioeconomic and medical risk factors may explain this racial disparity in pregnancy-related death. METHODS: Pregnancy-related deaths of African-American (N=60) and Caucasian (N=47) women were identified from review of pregnancy-associated deaths (N=400) ascertained through cause of death on death certificates, electronic linkage of birth and death files, and review of the hospital discharge database for the State of North Carolina, during the period between 1992 and 1998. Controls (N=3404) were randomly selected …


Race And Colorectal Cancer Disparities: Health-Care Utilization Vs Different Cancer Susceptibilities, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Chyke Doubeni, Paul Pinsky, V. Doria-Rose, Robert Bresalier, Lois Lamerato, E. Crawford, Paul Kvale, Mona Fouad, Thomas Hickey, Thomas Riley, Joel Weissfeld, Robert Schoen, Pamela Marcus, Philip Prorok, Christine Berg Jan 2012

Race And Colorectal Cancer Disparities: Health-Care Utilization Vs Different Cancer Susceptibilities, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Chyke Doubeni, Paul Pinsky, V. Doria-Rose, Robert Bresalier, Lois Lamerato, E. Crawford, Paul Kvale, Mona Fouad, Thomas Hickey, Thomas Riley, Joel Weissfeld, Robert Schoen, Pamela Marcus, Philip Prorok, Christine Berg

Chyke A. Doubeni

BACKGROUND: It is unclear whether the disproportionately higher incidence and mortality from colorectal cancer among blacks compared with whites reflect differences in health-care utilization or colorectal cancer susceptibility. METHODS: A total of 60, 572 non-Hispanic white and black participants in the ongoing Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening Trial underwent trial-sponsored screening flexible sigmoidoscopy (FSG) without biopsy at baseline in 10 geographically dispersed centers from November 1993 to July 2001. Subjects with polyps or mass lesions detected by FSG were referred to their physicians for diagnostic workup, the cost of which was not covered by PLCO. The records …