Why Health Equity? - ICTR
Transcript of Why Health Equity? - ICTR
What is Health Equity?Sheri Johnson, Ph.D.
Director, Population Health InstituteVisiting Associate Professor (CHS) Department of Population Health Sciences
November 1, 2018
Disclosures
• I have no financial disclosures• Correlation does not imply causation
Objectives:
Define health equity
1Differentiate between health disparities and health equity
2Recognize the role of community engagement in advancing health equity
3
What do we mean by health equity?
Working-Age Adult Health by Gender
Death Rate
Perc
ent o
f Po
pula
tion
Deat
h Ra
te
(Per
100
000)
Grades
Working-age Adults (25-64) 100% 289 BGender Male 50% 358 C
Female 50% 219 A
Unhealthy Days
Perc
ent o
f Po
pula
tion
Unh
ealth
y Da
ys p
er
Mon
th
Grades
Working-age Adults (25-64) 100% 6.4 BGender Male 50% 5.8 A
Female 50% 6.9 B
Working-Age Adult Health by RaceDeath Rate
Perc
ent o
f Po
pula
tion
Deat
h Ra
te
(per
10
0000
)
Grades
Working-age Adults (25-64) 100% 289 BRace/ethnicity African American 6% 591 F
Asian 2% 179 AHispanic/Latino 5% 193 AAmerican Indian 1% 604 FWhite non-Hispanic 85% 275 B
Unhealthy Days
Perc
ent o
f Po
pula
tion
Unh
ealth
y Da
ys p
er
Mon
th
Grades
Working-age Adults (25-64) 100% 6.4 BRace/ethnicity African American 6% 10.0 F
Asian 2% 4.1 AHispanic/Latino 5% 8.6 DAmerican Indian 1% 8.6 DWhite non-Hispanic 85% 5.9 B
What is Health Equity?
Health equity means that everyone has a fair and justopportunity to be as healthy as possible.
This requires removing obstacles to health such as poverty, discrimination, and their consequences, including powerlessness and lack of access to good jobs with fair pay, quality education and housing, safe environments, and health care.
Braveman P, Arkin E, Orleans T, Proctor D, and Plough A. What Is Health Equity? And What Difference Does a Definition Make? Princeton, NJ: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2017.
Explaining Key Concepts
Health equity is the ethical and human rights principle that motivates us to eliminate health disparities, which are differences in health or its key determinants (such as education, safe housing, and freedom from discrimination) that adversely affect marginalized or excluded groups.
Disparities in health and in the key determinants of health are the metric for assessing progress toward health equity
Braveman P, Arkin E, Orleans T, Proctor D, and Plough A. What Is Health Equity? And What Difference Does a Definition Make? Princeton, NJ: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2017.
Early Manifestations of the Prison Industrial Complex
Source: https://milwaukeenns.org/2018/08/30/west-allis-police-department-uses-armored-vehicle-to-serve-search-warrant-on-milwaukees-north-side/?mc_cid=0cab886b84&mc_eid=969de8cfb4. Accessed 9_18_18
Explaining Key Concepts
Examples of historically excluded, marginalized
or disadvantaged groups include—but are not
limited to—
people of color people living in poverty,
particularly across generations
religious minorities people with physical or
mental disabilities
LGBTQ persons WomenBraveman P, Arkin E, Orleans T, Proctor D, and Plough A. What Is Health Equity? And What Difference Does a Definition Make? Princeton, NJ: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2017.
Toomey, R. B., Umaña-Taylor, A. J., Williams, D. R., Harvey-Mendoza, E., Jahromi, L. B., & Updegraff, K. A. (2014). Impact of Arizona’s SB 1070 Immigration Law on Utilization of Health Care and Public Assistance Among Mexican-Origin Adolescent Mothers and Their Mother Figures.American Journal of Public Health, 104(Suppl 1), S28–S34. http://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2013.301655
The first evidence for Moral Foundations Theory
Is there a difference between social determinants of health and social determinants of equity?
Social Determinant of Health Social Determinants of Equity Social determinants of health include things like poverty and
adverse neighborhood conditions. Creating walking paths, bringing grocery stores to
underserved communities, or encouraging corner stores to sell fresh fruits and vegetables are ways to address the social determinants of health.
These are the contexts in which our health behaviors arise and confer risk or protection.
Social determinants of equity include systems of power like racism, sexism, heterosexism and economic systems like capitalism.
These are the systems that create the range of contexts that we see in our nation, and that differentially distribute different groups to different contexts.
The mechanisms of the social determinants of equity are in our decision making processes, including our structures, policies, practices, norms, and values.
Addressing the social determinants of equity involves changing decision-making processes so that they are inclusive, address history, and provide resources according to need.
Source: https://www.kpihp.org/how-racism-makes-people-sick-a-conversation-with-camara-phyllis-jones-md-mph-phd/. Accessed 8_1_18
Health Equity is the Goal
Commission on Social Determinants of Health. (2010). A conceptual framework for action on the social determinants of health. Geneva: World Health Organization.
“Public policy is not a savior, it is the root, fundamental cause of many social and health inequities”Paula Lantz, Professor, University of Michigan
Mark L. Hatzenbuehler, Katherine M. Keyes, Debora S. Hasin, “State-Level Policies and Psychiatric Morbidity In Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Populations”, American Journal of Public
Health 99, no. 12 (December 1, 2009): pp. 2275-2281.
Hatzenbuehler, M. L. (2011). The Social Environment and Suicide Attempts in Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Youth. Pediatrics, 127(5), 896–903. http://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2010-3020
Source: Krieger, N., Chen, J. T., Coull, B., Waterman, P. D., & Beckfield, J. (2013). The Unique Impact of Abolition of Jim Crow Laws on Reducing Inequities in Infant Death Rates and Implications for Choice of Comparison Groups in Analyzing Societal Determinants of Health. American Journal of Public Health, 103(12), 2234–2244. http://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2013.301350
“A social movement that only moves people is merely a revolt. A movement that changes both people and institutions is a revolution.” ― Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Are there disparities in social conditions?
What Works: Strategies to Improve Rural Health?
Source: https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/ocr/civilrights/activities/examples/TANF/wi_tanf_w2study.pdf
Should we do more of the same?
What are the options?
1. Current proactive practice of academically driven research initiatives
2. A more reactive practice for designing research in response to the needs and input of community agencies
3. The development of interactive practices that involve both academic researchers and the community as equal partners in all phases of a research project
The Future of Public Health Education. Institute of Medicine. 2003. Who Will Keep the Public Healthy?: Educating Public Health Professionals for the 21st Century. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10542 (pg. 88)
Respect Multiple Ways of Knowing
AcademicKnowledge
Experiential Knowledge (aka
lived experience; aka smart ideas
from people who don’t necessarily
work in academia)
What would happen if we “meaningfully engaged” with all knowledge leaders?
• “If we paid biological parents $1,500 per month to take care of their own children, I think that would solve the foster care problem”
• Source: AMCHP National Forum, parent advocate panelist, 2008
Young people know stuff too…
“Even when I was choosing my baby name, they look at your name. If you have a professional name, something that sounds like you will be a good worker, and then they’ll hire you…”
Source: Milwaukee Young Parenthood Study participant
Are Emily and Greg More Employable
Than Lakisha and Jamal?"
Experience matters
“US Opinions on Health Determinants and Social Policy as Health Policy”, American Journal of Public Health 101, no. 9 (September 1, 2011): pp. 1655-1663.
Explaining Key Concepts
To be effective, an organization may choose to focus on selected
disadvantaged groups.
The depth and extent (multiple versus single disadvantages) of disadvantage faced by a group, as well as judgment about where maximal impact could be
achieved, are legitimate considerations in choosing where to
focus.
Excluded or marginalized groups must be part of planning and implementing the actions to achieve greater health
equity.
Some individuals in an excluded or marginalized group may have escaped
from some of the disadvantages experienced by most members of that group; these exceptions do not negate
the fact that the group as a whole is disadvantaged in ways that can be
measured.
Braveman P, Arkin E, Orleans T, Proctor D, and Plough A. What Is Health Equity? And What Difference Does a Definition Make? Princeton, NJ: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2017.
The “slab of concrete heard around the world”
Stanford Social Innovation Review, Winter 2017
Words mean different things to different people
Unfair Just
Opportunity Obstacles
Privilege Power
Ferré, C. D., Jones, L., Norris, K. C., & Rowley, D. L. (2010). The Healthy African American Families (HAAF) Project: From Community-Based Participatory Research To Community-Partnered Participatory Research. Ethnicity & Disease, 20(1 0 2), S2–1–8.
Promoting Health Equity and Population Health:How Americans’ Views DifferHealth Affairs, 2016, 35:11, 1982-1990
Fundamental Cause Theory
• Individuals and groups deploy resources to avoid risk and adopt protections.
• Key resources include• Knowledge• Money• Power• Prestige • Beneficial social
connections• Link and Phelan, 1995
“Mom, you told me to call you when I realized I could change the world”
Source:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2015/10/05/immigrant-workers-or-slaves-textbook-maker-backtracks-after-mothers-online-complaint/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.9bc522d33d91
Accessed: 9_12_18
SUMMARY
Health equity is a values driven goal which requires us to assure that differences in social and economic contexts are reduced.
Values overlap, but also diverge among people in the United States.
Policy and decision making processes matter.
Fostering dialogue which reveals historical and present forms of unfair advantage may be an important component of community engagement.