Feature Channels: Race and Ethnicity

Filters close
Released: 11-Feb-2021 12:05 PM EST
Heart Structure May Play Role in Stroke Risk Disparities Between Black and White People
American Academy of Neurology (AAN)

Researchers have found that differences in the left atrium in the hearts of Black people and white people may play a role in risk of stroke, according to a new study published in the November 25, 2020, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

Released: 11-Feb-2021 11:40 AM EST
Low-Income Middle-Aged African-American Women with Hypertension Are Likely to Suffer from Depression
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Low-income middle-aged African-American women with high blood pressure very commonly suffer from depression and should be better screened for this serious mental health condition.

8-Feb-2021 9:00 AM EST
Chinese people may be more susceptible to obesity-related health risks than other racial, ethnic groups
Endocrine Society

Chinese people are more likely to face high blood pressure and other health risks as a result of higher body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference than people from other racial and ethnic groups, according to a new study published in the Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

Released: 10-Feb-2021 2:05 PM EST
Little Rock Congregations Study shows impact of COVID-19 on religious institutions
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The results of the 2020 Little Rock Congregations Study (LRCS), a research project based at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, shows that COVID-19 had a major impact on religious institutions in Little Rock. 

Released: 10-Feb-2021 12:50 PM EST
Most U.S. Schools Teaching Black History, But Few Doing It Well
 Johns Hopkins University

As the United States marks Black History Month this year, more K-12 schools in the United States are teaching Black history than ever before. However, ongoing analysis from Johns Hopkins University finds these efforts often fail, because coursework emphasizes the negative aspects of African American life while omitting important contributions made by families of color in literature, politics, theology, art, and medicine.

Released: 9-Feb-2021 11:20 AM EST
How to talk to patients of color about the COVID-19 vaccine amid hesitancy and mistrust
University of Chicago Medical Center

A new Annals of Internal Medicine editorial co-authored by a University of Chicago Medicine health disparities researcher offers practical tips for clinicians to discuss the COVID-19 vaccine with patients of color who may be hesitant to get vaccinated.

Released: 8-Feb-2021 3:55 PM EST
Addressing Breastfeeding Disparities for African American Mothers
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

An abundance of data underscore the importance of breastfeeding and human milk for the optimal health of infants, children, mothers, and society. But while breastfeeding initiation rates have increased to more than 80% in the U.S., a disparity exists for African American mothers and infants. In this group, breastfeeding is initiated only about 69% of the time.

Released: 5-Feb-2021 3:30 PM EST
Gap between the 'haves' and 'have nots' is being widened by the COVID pandemic, an IU study found
Indiana University

A new study by Indiana University found women, younger individuals, those with lower levels of formal education, and people of color are being hit hardest by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Released: 5-Feb-2021 2:40 PM EST
To counter health impacts of racism, UW School of Nursing establishing Center for Antiracism in Nursing
University of Washington

Recognizing that nurses play a central role in and hold major responsibility for the health of individuals and communities hit hard by historic racial inequity, the University of Washington School of Nursing is launching the Center for Antiracism in Nursing.

Released: 4-Feb-2021 1:10 PM EST
Food Allergies Are More Common Among Black Children
Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Black children have significantly higher rates of shellfish and fish allergies than White children, in addition to having higher odds of wheat allergy, suggesting that race may play an important role in how children are affected by food allergies, researchers at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, Rush University Medical Center and two other hospitals have found.

Released: 4-Feb-2021 12:55 PM EST
Systemic Racism & Health Care: Building Black Confidence in the COVID-19 Vaccine
University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV)

The Tuskegee syphilis experiment. The secret sale of Henrietta Lacks cancer research cells. Jim Crow laws affecting African Americans' ability to receive medical treatment. For weeks, it’s been hard to hear over the clamor of millions of Americans lining up for COVID-19 vaccines. But not everyone has been enthused — namely, large swaths of minority communities, which comprise the populations disproportionately impacted by the virus, but whose hesitance is largely fueled by the country’s racist medical past.

Released: 4-Feb-2021 12:50 PM EST
FSMB Symposium on Racism and Disparities in Health Care Now Available Online
Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB)

The Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB) released today a video recording of “Health Equity and Medical Regulation: How Disparities are Impacting U.S. Health Care Quality and Delivery and Why it Matters" – a symposium it hosted on January 26. The recording of the event is accessible for public viewing.

Released: 4-Feb-2021 9:00 AM EST
Where Black Americans Will Travel Farther than Whites for COVID-19 Vaccination
Health Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh

Similar to the idea of "food deserts," many urban Black neighborhoods lack pharmacies, clinics, hospitals or health centers that can administer COVID-19 vaccines. The analysis, including a detailed facility map, points to the places where there is a need for temporary mass vaccination sites.

   
Released: 4-Feb-2021 6:00 AM EST
Maad’ookiing Mshkiki — Sharing Medicine: Connecting Indigenous Communities with Culturally Relevant COVID-19 Vaccine Information
University Health Network (UHN)

Unpacking biomedicine, traditional knowledges and healing practices though oral storytelling and visualizations to support First Nations, Inuit and Métis in making informed choices.

Released: 3-Feb-2021 2:35 PM EST
Experiences of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) linked to nutritional health
University of Toronto

A study of factors associated with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) has led to a number of novel findings linking nutrition to experiences of PTSD.

Released: 3-Feb-2021 8:30 AM EST
Digital Health Divide Runs Deep in Older Racial and Ethnic Minorities
Florida Atlantic University

Results of a study qualitatively exploring reasons for digital health information disparity reveal a deep digital health divide that has important implications for helping older adults with COVID-19 vaccinations. Participants who were older, less educated, economically disadvantaged and from ethnic groups (African American, Afro-Caribbean or Hispanic American) were up to five times less likely to have access to digital health information than were those who were younger, more highly educated, had a higher income, or were European Americans.

1-Feb-2021 3:35 PM EST
Poll shows inequality among older adults in ability to isolate a COVID-19-positive person at home, or get outside
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

People who have tested positive for COVID-19 should isolate themselves from the other people they live with. But a new poll suggests that nearly one in five older adults don’t have the ability to do this – and that there are disparities by race, ethnicity, income and health status.

Released: 2-Feb-2021 8:30 AM EST
Study Aims to Break the Chains of Incarceration in African American Males
Florida Atlantic University

The majority of African American men return to prison within one to three years of their first release. A study explores why re-entry programs are not as effective for them when compared to others. Researchers suggest a holistic approach that addresses psychological and historical trauma in conjunction with the environmental factors that perpetuate the stigma justice-involved African American men experience. The approach accounts for negative associations developed in the centuries of oppression and segregation that shape their current societal interactions.

1-Feb-2021 11:55 AM EST
Gene mutations linked to worse outcomes from leukemia in Hispanic and Latino children
Penn State College of Medicine

A combination of genetic mutations may explain the higher incidence of and poorer outcomes from pediatric leukemia in Hispanic and Latino children, according to Penn State College of Medicine researchers.

Released: 1-Feb-2021 2:35 PM EST
Black History Month is important to a world hurting from racial injustices, pandemic
University of Michigan

February is Black History Month when the contributions, customs and achievements of African Americans are celebrated. But as the country deals with racial injustice and civil unrest, these 28 days take on greater importance, says Earl Lewis, University of Michigan professor of history and Afroamerican and African studies and director of the U-M Center for Social Solutions.

Released: 31-Jan-2021 3:05 PM EST
Social and Structural Factors, Not Biology, are Strong Influencers of Racial Disparities in COVID-19 Mortality
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

COVID-19 mortality racial disparities in the U.S. are associated with social factors like income, education and internet access, according to a Rutgers study.

Released: 29-Jan-2021 4:25 PM EST
UT Southwestern to Host Virtual Discussion on ‘Black Men in White Coats’ Documentary
UT Southwestern Medical Center

DALLAS – Jan. 29, 2021 – The importance of increasing the number of Black male doctors in the United States will be the subject of a virtual panel discussion at UT Southwestern in advance of the release of a documentary on the issue.

28-Jan-2021 4:30 PM EST
Black Lung Cancer Patients Die Sooner than White Counterparts
The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

Structural racism thwarts a large proportion of black patients from receiving appropriate lung cancer care, resulting in worse outcomes and shorter lifespans than white patients with the disease, according to research presented at the 57th Annual Meeting of The Society of Thoracic Surgeons.

27-Jan-2021 1:00 PM EST
Black or Hispanic Kids Receive Less Medical Imaging than White Kids
Health Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh

Large study publishing in JAMA Network Open shows Black and Hispanic children in hospital emergency departments are less likely to have imaging tests, such as X-rays or CT scans, ordered for them compared to White children. The authors attribute this disparity largely to overuse among Whites.

Released: 29-Jan-2021 8:05 AM EST
Study Explores How Racism and Threat Perception Play Out in Criminal Law
American Sociological Association (ASA)

In a new study, Scott Duxbury, Assistant Professor of Sociology at UNC, considers whether racial threat drove states to adopt punitive sentencing laws. His findings reveal that punitive sentencing laws, which have been implicated in racial disparity in punishment during mass incarceration, were adopted in response to large, rather than growing, black populations.

Released: 28-Jan-2021 3:15 PM EST
Vice Presidential Vogue: Kamala Harris and White House Fashion
University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV)

As Kamala Harris stood beside newly sworn-in President Joe Biden last week, all eyes were on her as she made history as the nation’s first female vice president.  But, much like other prominent women who have walked the halls of the White House before her, cultural experts expect that there will be  just as much focus on her fashion statements as on her political ones — and the scrutiny may be intensified as the first woman and person of color in the VP position takes on stereotypes surrounding Eurocentric standards of beauty.

Released: 28-Jan-2021 1:00 PM EST
Minority Nurse Practitioners Underrepresented in New York State
University at Albany, State University of New York

A recent study conducted by the University at Albany’s Center for Health Workforce Studies found that Hispanic NPs were underrepresented in most regions of the state when compared to the Hispanic population in those regions.

Released: 28-Jan-2021 12:05 PM EST
Expert: A historic opportunity to combat systemic racism
Washington University in St. Louis

President Biden signed four new executive orders collectively aimed at addressing racial inequality and justice. Washington University's John Robinson III, says it’s because of ongoing political engagement and pressure that Biden feels it necessary to pursue these aims, and we have this historic opportunity before us.

Released: 26-Jan-2021 12:55 PM EST
Race Plays a Role in Children’s Food Allergies
RUSH

Black children have significantly higher rates of shellfish and fish allergies than white children, confirming that race plays an important role in how children are affected by food allergies, researchers at Rush University Medical Center have found.

21-Jan-2021 9:00 AM EST
Addressing health disparities in diabetes requires a broader look at systemic racism
Endocrine Society

Poor social conditions caused by systemic racism contribute to health disparities in people with diabetes, according to a paper published in the Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

Released: 22-Jan-2021 12:40 PM EST
Patients of Asian and black backgrounds more likely to die from COVID, large study reveals
Queen Mary University of London

Patients of Asian and black backgrounds suffered disproportionate rates of premature death from COVID-19, according to a study of 1,737 patients by Queen Mary University of London and Barts Health NHS Trust.

   
Released: 22-Jan-2021 10:40 AM EST
March 2021 Highlights from AJPH
American Public Health Association (APHA)

Highlights from the AJPH March 2021 Issue.

   
Released: 22-Jan-2021 10:20 AM EST
Cross-Country Research Collaboration Brings First Ever Lupus Estimates
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A meta-analysis of lupus finds the disease is less common than previously thought, but disproportionally affects women and racial and ethnic minorities of both sexes.

Released: 22-Jan-2021 8:45 AM EST
Strange colon discovery explains racial disparities in colorectal cancer
University of Virginia Health System

The colons of African-Americans and people of European descent age differently, new research reveals, helping explain racial disparities in colorectal cancer – the cancer that killed beloved “Black Panther” star Chadwick Boseman.

Released: 21-Jan-2021 3:15 PM EST
Why So Few Black Skiers and Ballet Dancers?
University of Vermont

A new book, The Color of Culture, is the first to show with statistical rigor the much lower participation rates of Black vs. white Americans in a nine recreational and cultural activities, from golf to painting. It uses statistical techniques to show that systemic racism explains the discrepancy.

Released: 21-Jan-2021 3:05 PM EST
Study finds racial disparities in breast cancer prognosis testing
University of Illinois Chicago

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Tumblr email Study finds racial disparities in breast cancer prognosis testing January 21, 2021 Black women have higher recurrence and mortality rates than non-Hispanic white women for certain types of breast cancer, according to a University of Illinois Chicago researcher’s study published recently in JAMA Oncology.

19-Jan-2021 3:15 PM EST
Opiate Overdoses Spike in Black Philadelphians, But Drop in White Residents Since COVID-19
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

New research into opioid overdoses that occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted new disparities along racial lines that are likely fueled by existing inequality

Released: 20-Jan-2021 9:35 AM EST
Ohio State-Led Support Program Suggests A Reduction in Preterm Birth and Infant Mortality
Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

New research suggests a unique program called Moms2B at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center shows a reduction in adverse pregnancy outcomes in communities disproportionately affected by these public health issues.

Released: 18-Jan-2021 4:05 PM EST
Hackensack Meridian Health Honors the Life & Legacy of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Hackensack Meridian Health

New Jersey’s Largest Health Network Hosts Virtual Symposium to Inspire Action and Change, Announce Diversity and Inclusion Strategies for 2021; Part of Year-Round Effort to Close Disparities and Inequality in Health Care

   
Released: 18-Jan-2021 7:55 AM EST
RWJBarnabas Health and Rutgers School of Public Health Lead Pledge Declaring that Racism is a Public Health Crisis
Rutgers School of Public Health

In recognition of the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and 402 years of racism in the country, RWJBarnabas Health and the Rutgers School of Public Health join others around the nation to declare that racism is a public health crisis and that Black Lives Matter.

15-Jan-2021 2:05 PM EST
Vermont’s BIPOC drivers are most likely to have a run-in with police, study shows
University of Vermont

Examining more than 800,000 police stops in Vermont between 2014 to 2019, researchers confirm that Vermont authorities stop, ticket, arrest and search Black drivers at a rate far beyond their share of the state's total driving population.

Released: 14-Jan-2021 2:15 PM EST
Girls Who Are Emotionally Neglected or Severely Sexually Abused When Young Report Riskier Sexual Behaviors in Adolescence
Mount Sinai Health System

Girls who are emotionally neglected or severely sexually abused early in their lives report riskier sexual behaviors during adolescence, Mount Sinai researchers report. The findings highlight the need—and suggest the potential for tailored approaches—to promote healthy sexual development in vulnerable populations.

Released: 14-Jan-2021 8:55 AM EST
VIDEO AND TRANSCRIPT AVAILABLE: Vaccine Distribution: Newswise Live Event for January 13th, 2PM ET
Newswise

Experts will discuss and take questions on COVID-19 vaccine distribution.



close
2.07168