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Recommendation: Engage in community-wide health equality dialogues that address racial and ethnic health disparities, particularly the impact of structural racism on the health and well-being of communities of color in the region.
What we heard: Creating health equality involves more than just improving the quality and availability of health care. It requires understanding the roots of health inequality and the impact of structural racism on the lives and health of people of color. Once we understand how history, institutional practices, public policies, and cultural stereotypes intertwine in ways that perpetuate discrimination, inhibit opportunity and economic mobility, and eventually lead to poor health outcomes, we can create a new agenda for achieving health equality.
What we’ve done to advance this recommendation
What we’ve learned: How we define racial health inequity inevitably shapes our intervention. Taking a more holistic, social determinants approach to eliminating racial health disparities requires changing paradigms that focus solely on changing the individual health behaviors and increasing access to health care to transforming those socioeconomic structures, policies, and practices that maintain the inequities that cause racial and ethnic health inequity.
There are emerging research, collaboration, and program models around the country that are clearly identifying the underlying causes of health inequities and developing strategies informed by this knowledge. These models include examples of how public health workers, community health advocates, health funders, government agencies, policymakers and others are joining forces with their peers who work in education, housing, jobs/labor, criminal justice and transportation to envision and develop a comprehensive approach to creating systems that create and promote a just and healthy society. These models need to be held up and supported.
Next steps: We will use recommendations from the report by the Applied Research Center and the Philanthropic Initiative for Racial Equity to develop a plan to build both internal and external capacity to address social and racial justice issues. |
Resources, model programs and practices:
Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick? A four-hour documentary series that will sound the alarm about America's glaring socioeconomic and racial inequities in health, and search for its root causes.
As a primer to Unnatural Causes, RACE—The Power of an Illusion is a provocative three-hour series that questions the very idea of race as biology.
Louisville Center for Health Equity Recognizing that traditional public health practices have value but cannot succeed by themselves, the Louisville Center for Health Equity was established to address the social and economic conditions that impact the civic well-being of Louisville residents.
National Association of City and County Health Officials (NACCHO) Health Equity and Social Justice Increasing health inequities have implications for public health practice, and NACCHO seeks to identify approaches to eliminate them through a perspective grounded in principles of social justice.
Through an integrated strategy of communications, research, and advocacy, the Opportunity Agenda works with social justice organizations and leaders to connect with core American values and expand the constituency for opportunity in the United States. |