 CQ HEALTHBEAT NEWS
Feb. 10, 2005 - 4:13 p.m.
Minority Health Disparities: Redemption Through Data?
By John Reichard, CQ HealthBeat Editor
"Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care
is the most inhumane," Democratic delegate to Congress
Donna M. Christensen said when addressing a press briefing
Tuesday on minority health care disparities quoting Martin
Luther King, Jr.
There is no reason why African-American men should live 9
years less than white men, that African-American women
should live 6 years less than white women, or that
African-American babies should die twice as often during
infancy, she said.
To help end those disparities in health status,
Christensen, an up-and-comer in the Democratic caucus who
represents the Virgin Islands, is linking together with
former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former House
Republican James Greenwood, and former House Democrat
Peter Deutsch, to make the case that detailed data on the
nature of disparities and the zip codes in congressional
districts in which they are concentrated will help erase
the gap.
The new Congressional Leadership Alliance, a partnership
between elected officials, drug companies, minority
doctors, and consumers, plans to announce "health
disparity zones" a few months from now in eight
congressional districts.
Project designers envision the eight districts as a pilot
for what can be done elsewhere in the country. Deutsch
said he's convinced the disparity numbers can be changed
in those areas, and once that happens, he hopes Congress
will force action on a wider scale.
Targeting the problem by zip codes "really allows you to
identify health needs in a practical, actionable way,"
said Gingrich.
The eventual goal is to have each congressional district
in the country meet national averages on health status and
to move those national averages up, said Gingrich.
The National Minority Health Month Foundation defines a
disparity zone as "a disproportionate incidence of
[chronic] diseases and conditions occurs in the elderly,
and in racial and ethnic minority groups."
"These patients often reside in health disparity zones -
contiguous ZIP codes characterized by a disproportionate
prevalence of diseases and conditions that can be linked
to higher death rates, greater hospitalization rates, and
cost."
As an example, the group used a color map to illustrate
disparities in the 5th Congressional district in Atlanta,
represented by Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga.
"The rate of premature morbidity due to cardiovascular
disease is almost 400 percent higher in the red area - a
cluster of 19 zip codes - versus the green area on the
map," the foundation said. "These populations experience
not only a disproportionate share of the morbidity and
mortality associated with these conditions, but also a
resulting disproportionate share of the social and
economic costs."
The alliance was vague about how it would tackle
disparities once they are identified, saying it would draw
on the resources of its various members and rely on
"evidence-based" treatment practices.
Asked where actual dollars would come from, Gingrich
suggested the use of Medicaid and public health dollars
already in the system. Health officials would eagerly
target these funds if they knew precisely where they could
get the biggest impact for their money in closing wide
disparities.
The foundation said it already has data on disparities for
each of the congressional districts in the country. Among
the sources of the data are the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention and various state and local
agencies, a spokeswoman said.
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