262844
Tackling health inequalities through a focus on place: The role of residential segregation
Monday, October 29, 2012
: 10:50 AM - 11:05 AM
Brian Smedley, PhD
,
Health Policy Institute, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Washington, DC, DC
Racial and ethnic health inequities persist from the cradle to the grave, in the form of higher rates of infant mortality, disease and disability, and premature mortality for many communities of color relative to national averages. These inequities contribute to higher health care costs, but also carry a heavy economic burden for the nation, estimated to be as much as $1.24 trillion in direct health care costs and indirect costs associated with reduced productivity and lost wages and tax revenue. The causes of these inequities are complex, but are associated with differences in socioeconomic status, environmental risks and exposures, occupational exposures, health behaviors, and access to health care. At their core, many of these factors can be traced to historic and contemporary discrimination and differences in neighborhood and work environments that are the result of residential segregation and other structural inequities. This presentation explores how neighborhood and community contexts directly and indirectly shape health and contribute to health inequities as a result of racial and ethnic residential segregation. The presentation will also feature a discussion of policy strategies that de-concentrate poverty, reduce the geographic concentration of health risks, and increase investments in health-enhancing resources in communities that suffer from disinvestment.
Learning Areas:
Diversity and culture
Environmental health sciences
Public health or related public policy
Social and behavioral sciences
Learning Objectives: Describe the level of racial residential segregation in at least three major U.S. cities.
Describe how neighborhood and community contexts directly and indirectly shape health and contribute to health inequities as a result of racial and ethnic residential segregation.
Identify promising policy strategies being implemented at community levels that de-concentrate poverty, reduce the geographic concentration of health risks, and increase investments in health-enhancing resources in communities that suffer from disinvestment.
Keywords: Health Disparities, Minorities
Presenting author's disclosure statement:Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I direct a national initiative to help leaders in 24 jurisdictions identify and address social, economic, and environmental conditions in communities that shape health and health inequities. I will present research findings and policy analysis that supports this work.
Any relevant financial relationships? No
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines,
and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed
in my presentation.
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