Feature Channels: Race and Ethnicity

Filters close
Released: 15-Mar-2021 4:30 PM EDT
Researchers propose early stroke sign and symptom recognition tool for Spanish-speakers
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Researchers with The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) have created an acronym, RAPIDO™, to move forward much-needed efforts to address stroke sign and symptom awareness among at-risk Spanish-speaking individuals.

Released: 15-Mar-2021 1:50 PM EDT
Study: Men of color avoid public places out of fear of involvement with criminal justice agents
Crime and Justice Research Alliance

The U.S. criminal legal system has expanded at a rapid pace, even as crime rates have declined since the 1990s.

Released: 15-Mar-2021 12:55 PM EDT
Black Women More Likely To Gain Weight Than White Women After Menopause
RUSH

In a study published published in the medical journal PLOS ONE, researchers from Rush Institute for Health Aging find that racial disparities play a role in weight gain in older women.

Released: 12-Mar-2021 12:35 PM EST
Fatal police violence nearby increases risk of preterm birth
University of California, San Francisco (UCSF)

Black women have 80% higher risk of preterm birth between 32 and 33 weeks of pregnancy if a Black person who lives in their neighborhood is killed by police during the pregnancy, according to a study by researchers at UC San Francisco and UC Berkeley.

Released: 11-Mar-2021 10:05 AM EST
New Initiative by Henry Ford Cancer Institute Aims to Increase Minority Participation in Clinical Trials
Henry Ford Health

Henry Ford Cancer Institute is launching the Participatory Action for Access to Clinical Trials (PAACT) project to dramatically improve the representation of the African American community and other minorities in cancer clinical trials. Supported by a $750,000 grant from Genentech, PAACT is a community-based research initiative in collaboration with the Detroit Community-Academic Urban Research Center (Detroit URC) that will address various barriers to trust and participation in clinical trials.

Released: 11-Mar-2021 8:05 AM EST
CoVPN’s Faith and Diversity Work Engages Key Communities Impacted by COVID-19
Covid-19 Prevention Network (CoVPN)

The COVID-19 Prevention Network (CoVPN) released today the CoVPN Faith Initiative and Diversity Report, which provides a snapshot of key work to build trust, inform and engage the communities hardest hit by the pandemic in conversations about faith, COVID-19 and CoVPN clinical trials.

   
Released: 10-Mar-2021 11:55 AM EST
Media Availability: UNH British Historian to Comment on Harry and Meghan Interview and Fate of Modern Monarchy
University of New Hampshire

Nicoletta Gullace, associate professor of history at the University of New Hampshire who studies 20th century and modern British history, is available for comment around Harry and Meghan’s explosive interview and Queen Elizabeth's statement saying the issues raised were “concerning.” She can discuss the underlying historical influences around the royal family’s continued attempts to remain relevant and popular at this difficult time.

Released: 10-Mar-2021 11:10 AM EST
CSU’s Super Sunday Goes Virtual to Promote Higher Learning
California State University (CSU) Chancellor's Office

Outreach to African American community aims to encourage a college-going culture and to eliminate equity gaps.

Released: 10-Mar-2021 6:00 AM EST
New Fellowships Support Under-Represented Minorities in Glaucoma Research
Research to Prevent Blindness

The Glaucoma Foundation (TGF) and Research to Prevent Blindness (RPB) have partnered to launch a new grant aimed at supporting under-represented racial and ethnic minority researchers in the pursuit of glaucoma research. The TGF (sponsored by Patricia Hill) / RPB Fellowships in Glaucoma provide one-year, $10,000 fellowships focused on substantive glaucoma research.

Released: 9-Mar-2021 2:00 PM EST
More evidence is urgently needed on opioid use in Black communities
Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott

Although the prevalence of opioid use among Black people is comparatively low, the rate of opioid deaths has increased the sharpest and fastest among that population in recent years, according to an article in the March/April issue of Harvard Review of Psychiatry. The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.

Released: 9-Mar-2021 9:45 AM EST
Study Finds Low Awareness of PrEP, the Highly Effective Medication that Protects Individuals from HIV
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

A study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found that just under 20 percent of HIV-uninfected patients visiting Baltimore sexual health clinics were aware of pre-exposure prophylaxis medication (PrEP), a daily regimen that decreases a person’s risk of contracting HIV from sex by more than 90 percent.

Released: 8-Mar-2021 4:05 PM EST
Study finds racial disparities in COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes
University of Chicago Medical Center

Nursing homes with the largest proportions of non-White residents experience 3.3 times more COVID-19 deaths than do nursing homes with the largest proportions of White residents, according to a new study from the University of Chicago.

Released: 8-Mar-2021 2:00 PM EST
Mount Sinai Launches Program to Increase Black Women Leaders in Executive Roles
Mount Sinai Health System

First-of-its-kind group will bring transformational change and empower Black leaders

   
Released: 8-Mar-2021 12:30 PM EST
UCLA-led Study Reveals ‘Hidden Costs’ of Being Black in the U.S.
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

A new UCLA-led study analyzed a national sample of the views of Black men and white men found that Black men of all income levels reported experiencing higher levels of discrimination than their white counterparts.

Released: 8-Mar-2021 10:15 AM EST
Globalization of cancer clinical trials linked to lower enrollment of Black patients
Wiley

For the drug approval process in the United States, investigators have been expanding clinical trials to sites outside the country.

3-Mar-2021 1:30 PM EST
A Call to Action to Address Racial Inequities in Medical Tests
American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

A new perspective article published in CJASN examines how the use of race in calculating kidney function, as well as other aspects of health, can cause harm to patients.

Released: 5-Mar-2021 3:55 PM EST
With unfair police treatment, the tragedy is not limited to the incident itself
University at Buffalo

Research using a nationally representative sample of more than 12,000 participants shows the collateral consequences victims are likely to confront following unfair treatment by police. Those who are unjustly stopped, searched or questioned by law enforcement will likely experience a range of detrimental outcomes associated with the encounter, including depression, suicidal thoughts, drug use, and a loss of self-efficacy, according to the results.

Released: 4-Mar-2021 2:15 PM EST
Latinos, Blacks less swayed by college-bound friends
Cornell University

In new research published March 4 in American Educational Research Journal, Alvarado reports that having college-bound friends increases the likelihood that a student will enroll in college. However, the effect of having college-bound friends is diminished for Black and Latino students compared with white and Asian students, especially for males and especially for selective and highly selective colleges, due to structural and cultural processes.

Released: 4-Mar-2021 12:55 PM EST
A parental paradox for Black girls in the justice system
Ohio State University

For Black girls in the juvenile justice system, attention from a caregiver might amount to too much of a bad thing, a recent study suggests.

Released: 4-Mar-2021 12:05 PM EST
Racist Policing Follows the Rail Lines, New Study Shows
American University

People of color are five times more likely than white persons to be ticketed for fare evasion along mass-transit lines in Los Angeles, a new study of aggressive law enforcement on the Los Angeles transit system shows.

Released: 3-Mar-2021 3:45 PM EST
Giving voice to Black history in the Inland Empire
University of Redlands

Students in the Black History of the Inland Empire course are interviewing dozens of local Black elders and recording valuable oral histories to better understand the region's evolution.

Released: 3-Mar-2021 2:50 PM EST
Neuroimaging reveals how ideology affects race perception
Cornell University

In new research published Feb. 22 in Philosophical Transactions of Royal Society B, Krosch used neuroimaging to show that this effect seems to be driven by white conservatives’ greater sensitivity to the ambiguity of mixed-race faces rather than a sensitivity to the Blackness of faces; this sensitivity showed up in a neural region often associated with affective reactions.

Released: 2-Mar-2021 8:00 AM EST
Black NBA players have shorter careers than white players
Ohio State University

Black players in the NBA have 30% greater odds of leaving the league in any given season than white players who have equivalent performance on the court, a new study finds.

Released: 1-Mar-2021 4:25 PM EST
Case Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers to lead Northeast Ohio initiative to increase prostate cancer screening in African American men
Case Western Reserve University

African American men in Cuyahoga County have a 60% increased risk of being diagnosed with prostate cancer and an 80% increased risk of dying from prostate cancer compared to white men, according to data from the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center. With a new $2.75 million, three-year grant from the Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation, researchers at the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center at Case Western Reserve University will collaborate with a team of community partners in a different approach to fight this health disparity.

Released: 1-Mar-2021 2:20 PM EST
Significant New Findings about Breast and Ovarian Cancer in Patients from the Caribbean
University of Miami Health System, Miller School of Medicine

In this study, among Caribbean-born individuals with breast and ovarian cancer, 1 in 7 had hereditary breast and ovarian cancer. The proportion of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer varied by island and each island had a distinctive set of variants.

Released: 1-Mar-2021 2:15 PM EST
The Vilcek Foundation opens applications for the 2022 Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise in Biomedical Science
Vilcek Foundation

The Vilcek Foundation has announced an open call for applications for the 2022 Vilcek Prizes for Creative Promise in Biomedical Science.

   
Released: 1-Mar-2021 12:05 PM EST
Reinforced by policies, charters segregate schools
Cornell University

The expansion of charter schools in the 2000s led to an increase in school segregation and a slight decline in residential segregation, according to new research from Cornell University providing the first national estimates of the diverging trends.

Released: 1-Mar-2021 11:45 AM EST
Rutgers Female Professors Reflect on Past Year of Racial Unrest, Pandemic
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

After a year of racial unrest due to the killing of unarmed Black men and women and the upending of our regular lives due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many have forged a new outlook on life. Two Black Rutgers female faculty share their reflections on the past year and their hopes for the future.

   
25-Feb-2021 2:55 PM EST
Medical School Curriculum Takes Aim at Social Determinants of Health
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist

There is a growing recognition in health care that social factors such as racial bias, access to care and housing and food insecurity, have a significant impact on people’s health. Compounding and amplifying those underlying inequalities are the ongoing disruptions related to the COVID-19 pandemic and social unrest in our country.

Released: 26-Feb-2021 1:50 PM EST
Heart month: Researchers create Texas’ first statewide cardiac arrest registry, highlight racial disparities in CPR training
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Projections from Texas’ first cardiac arrest registry show that every day at least 60 Texans will suffer an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, which is a sudden loss of heart function, breathing, and consciousness. If bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is performed, the victim’s chance of survival can triple, but less than half of victims in the Lone Star State receive any bystander CPR, according to data from the registry.

26-Feb-2021 9:30 AM EST
Researchers Uncover Link Between Racial, Ethnic and Socioeconomic Factors and Likelihood of Getting Effective Treatment for Atrial Fibrillation
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Even though the use of rhythm control strategies for treating Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation (AF), a common abnormal heart rhythm, have increased overall in the United States, patients from racial and ethnic minority groups and those with lower income were less likely to receive rhythm control treatment - often the preferred treatment - according to new research from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

Released: 25-Feb-2021 7:30 PM EST
Diversity Among Study Participants Credited with Identifying Gene Linked to Asthma
Henry Ford Health

Researchers at Henry Ford Health System, as part of a national asthma collaborative, have identified a gene variant associated with childhood asthma that underscores the importance of including diverse patient populations in research studies. The study is published in the print version of the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

Released: 25-Feb-2021 6:05 PM EST
Rutgers Cancer Health Justice Lab Creates COVID-19 Educational Video in Spanish
Rutgers School of Public Health

COVID-19 disproportionately impacts Latinx families more than any other racial and ethnic group, yet there are few available resources to mitigate these risks. The Rutgers School of Public Health’s Cancer Health Justice Lab has launched an educational COVID-19 video in Spanish to address the lack of resources available to Latinx families.

Released: 25-Feb-2021 3:40 PM EST
Argonne’s first Black director reflects on science, inequality and a new honor
Argonne National Laboratory

Walter Massey, the lab’s first Black director, looks back on his time at Argonne and discusses the inequities of minorities in science in light of a new Argonne Fellowship named for him.

Released: 25-Feb-2021 2:35 PM EST
Survey reveals racial, political differences in COVID-19 responses
Michigan State University

A study from Michigan State University that found in spite of Black Americans’ attitudes toward proper precautions, they are disproportionately impacted by the pandemic and White people are less likely to fall ill.

   
Released: 25-Feb-2021 12:55 PM EST
Black Females More Likely Than Black Males to Exercise, Eat Healthy When Faced with Perceived Discrimination
American Psychological Association (APA)

Black men and women, as well as adolescent boys and girls, may react differently to perceived racial discrimination, with Black women and girls engaging in more exercise and better eating habits than Black men and boys when faced with discrimination, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.

22-Feb-2021 2:40 PM EST
Current Liver Cancer Screenings May Leave African Americans at Greater Risk
Mount Sinai Health System

Early detection could reduce the number of African Americans dying from liver cancer, but current screening guidelines may not find cancer soon enough in this community, according to a study published in Cancer in February.

Released: 24-Feb-2021 3:45 PM EST
Chicago’s racial wealth gap examined in new UIC report
University of Illinois Chicago

Interviews by the University of Illinois Chicago’s Institute for Research on Race and Public Policy highlight the precarity of many Black and Latino families who have ‘made it’

Released: 24-Feb-2021 12:05 PM EST
COVID-19 Risk Factors for Healthcare Workers: Race, Ethnicity
Cedars-Sinai

Healthcare workers might not be so different from the general population in the factors that determine their risk of getting COVID-19. A new study led by Cedars-Sinai shows that healthcare workers are more likely to have antibodies to COVID-19 in their blood if they are African American or Latino or have hypertension.

Released: 24-Feb-2021 11:45 AM EST
Losing Obamacare protections during pandemic could increase health disparities
Oregon Health & Science University

If Affordable Care Act protections for pre-existing condition coverage are no longer available, the coronavirus pandemic would leave many Americans - a disproportionate number of whom are people of color - without health insurance, a new Oregon Health & Science University study indicates.

   
Released: 24-Feb-2021 9:00 AM EST
Ancestry estimation perpetuates racism, white supremacy
Binghamton University, State University of New York

Ancestry estimation -- a method used by forensic anthropologists to determine ancestral origin by analyzing bone structures -- is rooted in “race science” and perpetuates white supremacy, according to a new paper by a forensic anthropologist at Binghamton University, State University of New York.

18-Feb-2021 9:00 AM EST
Waitlist Policies May Contribute to Racial Disparities in Access to Kidney Transplantation
American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

• Racial disparities in access to kidney transplantation persist in the United States. New research indicates that registering Black patients on the kidney transplant waitlist at a slightly higher level of kidney function compared with white patients might lessen racial inequality in patients’ wait time prior to kidney failure onset, and ultimately improve racial equity in access to kidney transplantation.

Released: 23-Feb-2021 1:00 PM EST
First “Race, Ethnicity and Alzheimer’s in America” Report and Updated 2021 Alzheimer’s Facts & Figures Report
Alzheimer's Association

The forthcoming 2021 Alzheimer’s Association Facts & Figures Report, as well as a new supplemental report “Race, Ethnicity and Alzheimer’s in America,” will be released March 2. Facts and Figures provides in-depth information on Alzheimer’s and other dementias in the U.S., including the latest stats on prevalence, mortality, costs, caregiving and other insights both nationally and with state by state data.

Released: 22-Feb-2021 1:30 PM EST
Leading Health and Cancer Advocacy Groups Unite to Reduce Racial Disparities in Cancer Care
National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®)

The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN), American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN) and the National Minority Quality Forum (NMQF) presented new ideas for overcoming inequality in oncology. The recommendations address how medical systems often disproportionately fail minority patients.

Released: 22-Feb-2021 11:55 AM EST
Ida B. Wells Scholarship Fund announced at UIC
University of Illinois Chicago

The Ida B. Wells Scholarship Fund has been created to meet some of the needs of African American students to help them receive their degrees.



close
2.60089