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Debate: Exposing the most serious infirmity-racism's impact on health in the era of COVID-19.

Identifieur interne : 000067 ( Main/Corpus ); précédent : 000066; suivant : 000068

Debate: Exposing the most serious infirmity-racism's impact on health in the era of COVID-19.

Auteurs : Wilfred H. Farquharson ; Carmen J. Thornton

Source :

RBID : pubmed:32686292

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic retells a story that other diseases like HIV, diabetes, and cancer have clearly internationally illustrated. Minorities in developed countries across the globe - especially those of African, Hispanic, and Native American descent - suffer a greater burden of disease than whites. The evidence of the cause and effect relationship of racism on mental and minority health outcomes is staggering. Racism and its influence on policy and important structural systems allow health inequities across racial and ethnic groups to persist. What's more troubling is how systemic racism impacts children from all races and has been perpetuated across many generations dating back hundreds of years. The impact of racial oppression is seen through intergenerational trauma which impacts youth in varying ways. For this article, we offer three areas in which racism causes healthcare disparities, intergenerational trauma, social determinants, and cultural mistrust. Effective policy change and a greater level of accountability must be placed on major systems including health care, to most fully counter racism's varied role in sustaining mental health inequities.

DOI: 10.1111/camh.12407
PubMed: 32686292

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pubmed:32686292

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<Citation>ACAMH. (n.d.). Should mental health professionals understand …. Available from: https://www.acamh.org/blog/intergenerational-trauma/ [last accessed 8 June 2020].</Citation>
</Reference>
<Reference>
<Citation>Gee, G.C., & Ford, C.L. (2011). Structural racism and health inequities. Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, 8, 115-132.</Citation>
</Reference>
<Reference>
<Citation>Kirby, J.B., Taliaferro, G., & Zuvekas, S.H. (2006). Explaining racial and ethnic disparities in health care. Medical Care, 44(Suppl), I-64-I-72.</Citation>
</Reference>
<Reference>
<Citation>Orr, N., Elliott, M.N., Burkhart, Q., Haviland, A., & Weinick, R.M. (2013). Racial/ethnic differences in medicare experiences and immunization. Medical Care, 51, 823-831.</Citation>
</Reference>
<Reference>
<Citation>Powers, A., Stevens, J.S., O’banion, D., Stenson, A.F., Kaslow, N., Jovanovic, T., & Bradley, B. (2020). Intergenerational transmission of risk for PTSD symptoms in African American children: The roles of maternal and child emotion dysregulation. Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy. [Epub ahead of print] https://doi.org/10.1037/tra0000543</Citation>
</Reference>
<Reference>
<Citation>Siddique, H. (2020, April 30). British BAME Covid-19 death rate 'more than twice that of whites'. Available from: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/01/british-bame-covid-19-death-rate-more-than-twice-that-of-whites [last accessed 07 June 2020].</Citation>
</Reference>
<Reference>
<Citation>Washington, H.A. (2006). Medical apartheid the dark history of medical experimentation on Black Americans from colonial times to the present. New York: Harlem Moon.</Citation>
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<Citation>Zabel, M.R. (2006). What happens to health care quality when the patient pays? Quality and Safety in Health Care, 15, 146-147.</Citation>
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