AMA



Press the print button on your browser.
Click here to return to the previous page.

Report 1 of the Council on Scientific Affairs (I-02)
Full Text


Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care


NOTE: This report represents information on on this subject as of December 2002.

Full Text

Despite steady improvements in the overall health of Americans, racial and ethnic disparities in health status remain.1 For instance, African Americans experience higher rates of morbidity and mortality from a number of diseases, including heart disease and stroke, cancer, diabetes, asthma, HIV/AIDS, and cerebrovascular disease. Similarly, Hispanic Americans experience disproportionate rates of morbidity and mortality from diabetes, cancer, and heart disease. American Indian and Alaska Natives are disadvantaged on a number of health status indicators, including life expectancy and infant mortality. Finally, some Asian American subpopulations experience rates of certain cancers that are well above national averages. The reasons for these disparities are complex and poorly understood. Socioeconomic inequality, individual behavioral risk factors, and cultural factors are all correlated with health status.2-3 Disparities in access to health care also clearly play a role. Of most concern is evidence suggesting that even at equivalent levels of access to care, racial and ethnic minorities receive lower quality and quantity of health services compared to white Americans.4

Methods

A systematic review of the literature was conducted using the MEDLINE database for the years 1985 to 2002. English-language articles were selected based on their ability to: (1) inform as to the extent of racial and ethnic disparities in health care today; (2) articulate the causes and consequences of health care disparities; and (3) illustrate the appropriate role of physicians and physician organizations in addressing health care disparities. Other sources included the recent Institute of Medicine (IOM), Kaiser Family Foundation, and Commonwealth Fund reports on health care disparities. Further relevant articles and books were selected from the reference listings of the primary journal articles and foundation reports.

Terminology

For the purposes of this report, health care refers to the continuum of services provided in traditional health care settings, including hospitals, clinics, community-based health centers, and nursing homes. Disparities in health care are defined as racial and ethnic differences in the quantity or quality of health care that are not due to clinical needs, patient preferences, or the appropriateness of the intervention. Racial and ethnic groups are defined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) classification system for data on race and ethnicity. The revised OMB standards establish five categories for "racial" groups (American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander, and White) and two categories for "ethnic" groups (Hispanic or Latino and Not Hispanic or Latino). While these definitions have been subject to considerable debate, it should be noted that the Council on Scientific Affairs has reviewed numerous classification systems and has recommended the revised OMB classification system for collection of data on race and ethnicity.5

Evidence for Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care

Racial and ethnic disparities in health care have been extensively documented. Minority race and/or ethnicity has been linked to a lower likelihood of having a regular source of care, fewer physician visits, less-intensive hospital visits, and lower total health care expenditures.4,6-9 Minority race and ethnicity are also risk factors for less--if not lower quality--care across a range of health care services.4,7,9-14 For example, minority race or ethnicity has been linked to disparities in receipt of appropriate cancer diagnostic tests and treatment4,7,15-24; screening, diagnostic and therapeutic interventions for heart disease and stroke4,7,25-37; diabetes care38-40; clinical procedures for cerebrovascular disease7,41-43; HIV care44-45; renal transplantation29,46-48; asthma care7,49-51; and a range of other preventive and specialty health services.4,7,10,52-55 Most studies have examined disparities in health care only among adult populations. However, racial and ethnic minority children and adolescents are also at considerable disadvantage, with minority status associated with a lower likelihood of having a usual source of care,9,56-60 receiving treatment for common but significant health problems,60-63 access to selected preventive services,9,56,60-61,64-65 and receiving prescription medications.62,66-68

Most of the studies reviewed for this report contain one or more weaknesses in study design methodology. Their findings, however, are compelling when examined in the context of the consistencies found in the larger body of literature.4,69 Recent studies have also sought to control for potential confounding factors that may account for disparities in care. Studies of cardiovascular care provide some of the most convincing evidence of racial and ethnic disparities, as many control for access to care and assess both potential underuse and overuse of services by using established diagnostic criteria to control for disease severity.4,33,70-72 For example, studies of differences in treatment following coronary angiography suggest that disparities in care are not fully explained by access variables such as insurance status or type of hospital,36 or by clinical factors such as racial differences in the severity of coronary disease, or overuse of services by whites.28,70,73-75

Racial and ethnic minority patients experience a lower quality and intensity of health care and diagnostic services across range of other diseases and procedures, including maternal and child health care,76-77 mental health,78 rehabilitative services,79-80 long-term care,81 and pain management.82 For example, the recent Surgeon General’s report on mental health care83 found minority patients to be diagnosed less accurately when suffering from depression and seen in primary care84 or when they were seen for a psychiatric evaluation in an emergency room.85 However, it should be noted that not all disparities are negative. In some cases minorities are more likely to receive certain procedures or services (eg, adolescent reproductive health services).86-87 These cases, however, are usually the exception and often may involve generally less desirable services (eg, bilateral orchiectomy and amputation).4,88

Linking Disparities in Health Care to Health Outcomes

While the connection appears intuitive, disparities in health care have only recently been linked directly to disparities in health outcomes. In part, this is because health outcomes may be a consequence of a number of factors of which health care is only one. These include, but are not limited to, socioeconomic status, genetics, risk behavior, disaffiliation, geographic location, residential segregation, and discrimination.3,89-93 While population studies suggest that medical care makes only a limited contribution to health status outcomes,94-95 the relative impact of health care is much greater for racial and ethnic minorities due to existence of multiple vulnerabilities.90 This contention is supported by a number of recent studies examining the impact of health care disparities. For example, research suggests that disparities in coronary revascularization procedures are directly associated with higher mortality rates among African Americans.75 Similarly, disparities in cancer care are associated with higher death rates among minorities.19,96 Finally, differences in the quality of care for patients with HIV are associated with poorer survival rates among minorities, even controlling for access to care.97-98

Why Health Care Disparities Exist

Like our understanding of health status, the reasons for disparities in health care are complex and poorly understood.4,7,10 As more potential confounding variables are controlled for, the magnitude of racial and ethnic disparities in health care decreases, but does not disappear. Insurance status and access to health care emerge as key predictors of the quality and intensity of health care for racial and ethnic minorities.99 A related factor influencing the quality of health care is the location where it is received, with minorities more likely to access care in public and non-teaching hospitals and clinics where the quality of health care may be lower than in teaching hospitals and private settings.4,100 However, health insurance coverage and income combined typically account for less than half of the disparities observed.11

Beyond access-related issues, a range of patient-, provider-, and system-level factors may all play a role in the production of racial and ethnic disparities in health care (see Table).4, 101 Studies of minority patients suggest that they may delay seeking care or adhere poorly to treatment regimens.17,102-103 These behaviors typically occur because of lack of familiarity with disease/treatment, mistrust of physicians or the health care system, poor prior interactions with the health care system, and/or poor recall or a misunderstanding of provider instructions.10,103-108

System-level factors result from the way in which health care is organized and financed and include cultural and language barriers,4,109-110 time pressures,4 cost-control efforts,4,111-112 and the geographic availability of health care services.4,113-114 For example, geographic availability and the cost-control model of managed care have made it more difficult for minority patients to maintain continuity of care.100,110-111,115-117 Similarly, failure by the health care system to address language or cultural barriers negatively affects the use of health services and clinical outcomes for minorities.4,104,108

Provider-level factors include individual bias, clinical uncertainty, and prior beliefs (eg, stereotypes) about the health or health care preferences of minority patients.4,118-120 Research also suggests that clinical uncertainty contributes to disparities in health care.120 Clinical uncertainty (or simply the volume of information) also increases physicians’ explicit or implicit reliance on prior attitudes or beliefs about the patient, which may vary according to the patient’s race or ethnicity. Stereotyping and/or discrimination, in turn, may negatively affect health care utilization and care outcomes.4,119-121

Patient-, system-, and provider-based factors may each explain only a fraction of disparities in health care. The relative influence of these individual factors is complex and poorly understood.4 Patient factors may actually account for the least amount of variation in health care utilization,29,122-123 suggesting that greater responsibility for racial and ethnic disparities in health care, independent of access, may fall on the system or provider. Of these, the organization of the health care system may be the most influential. To illustrate, clinical decision-making is clearly influenced by provider uncertainty, and bias and beliefs that affect the overall care experience and may contribute directly or indirectly to health care disparities.118,124-125 However, these provider factors are aggravated by increasing time pressures and resource restrictions (system-level factors) dictating many clinical encounters. These system pressures decrease opportunities for patient-centered care101,126 and increase the probability that medical decision-making will reflect greater subjective variability and the preferences of the physician.4,127 The likelihood of disparate care is further increased by other system factors, such as the fragmentation of health care and the relegation of many racial and ethnic minorities to more restrictive health plans.4,128

The provision of health care in the United States must be understood in the broader context in which race and ethnicity have long been used to organize and give meaning to social interaction.129-130 Social categorization is a powerful influence on differential thought and behavior in social interaction, engendering often-harmful stereotypes and attitudes (both implicit and explicit) toward members of social groups that significantly shape the outcomes of interpersonal interactions.131 This is evident in both the patient and provider factors discussed above; because both are members of society they share a need to process and recall information about others. Over time, however, social categorization and the stereotypes and attitudes it engenders also influence the operation of systems or institutions in society. This institutionalization of group differences is the key process in perpetuating greater and more lasting inequalities. This is especially true in the United States, which is an increasingly diverse nation with a long history of inequality based on race and ethnicity.

Professionalism Revisited: The Role of Physicians in Eliminating Health Care Disparities

Racial and ethnic disparities in health care represent a clear public health problem, threatening ongoing efforts to improve the nation’s health.132 For physicians, these disparities also pose moral and ethical dilemmas that, according to the recent Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care, 4(p 30) "will be among the most significant challenges of today’s rapidly changing health systems." Physicians are faced with ever-increasing sets of expectations. On the one hand, they are increasingly called upon to serve as managers of limited health care resources, while, on the other hand, they have professional and ethical obligations to serve as patient and public health advocates.133-134 Complicating matters is the fact that, as a prototypic profession, medicine is organized around service to the most vulnerable populations in society. 135 Obligations of the health care professional to these vulnerable classes of people are articulated in the American Medical Association’s (AMA) Principles of Medical Ethics, which call on physicians to support access to medical care for all people and to recognize their responsibility to contribute to the improvement of the community and the betterment of public health.136 Practicing nondiscrimination based on race or ethnicity has also been a clear ethical standard within medicine for more than 20 years.137

Concern exists, however, that medicine is being deprofessionalized--that professional standards are being sacrificed to the pressures of increasingly dominant market forces.138-139 There are seminal differences between medicine and business, not the least of which are the spirit of public service and those behaviors that demonstrate that physicians are worthy of the trust bestowed on them by patients and the public. In short, physicians and physician organizations have a clear professional and moral responsibility to advocate and care for vulnerable populations and to prevent suffering.135,137,140

Physicians and physician organizations can help eliminate health care disparities through medical practice and through leadership roles in health advocacy policy and public health promotion.140-142 In particular, the tools of population-based medicine (PBM) can be employed to improve health care for racial and ethnic minorities. Population-based medicine is a clinical strategy that attempts to manage the health care of a population as a whole, placing the individual within the context of a larger community of both sick and well individuals. Population-based strategies allow physicians to identify the most prevalent diseases or conditions among patients in a practice or community. They also enable physicians to identify variations in health outcomes and health care among these patients and to examine possible correlations between variations in care and individual patient factors (eg, race or ethnicity), provider factors, and/or system factors.143 Thus identified, interventions can be considered to eliminate racial and ethnic health care disparities at both the level of the individual patient and the level of the community.

Interventions at either level must involve health care providers in a variety of settings, including hospitals, outpatient settings, and long-term care facilities.144 At the community level, physicians and their associations must lead the movement for reform within the health care delivery system, as they have the knowledge, capacity, and opportunity to effect meaningful and lasting (system) change.145 Efforts begin with, but are not limited to, advocacy for universal access to appropriate and effective care and for the elimination of bias in health care, including efforts to counter the fragmentation of health plans along socioeconomic lines. Physicians also have a professional responsibility to take leadership roles in sensitive efforts to rebuild trust in the health care system among minority populations.146 At the practice level, the elimination of health care disparities is best addressed as a quality improvement function, as disparities in health care delivery represent a fundamental threat to quality.147 Currently, there are clear racial and ethnic disparities in care as measured against existing clinical quality improvement guidelines.148-150 Evidence also suggests that adherence to evidence-based clinical guidelines may actually reduce health care disparities.151-152 Despite this promise, however, existing quality measures fail to adequately identify socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities in quality.147 Physicians and their associations are also challenged to move beyond simply the development of clinical quality standards and actively develop and promote companion tools and programs designed to improve health care for minorities. These include, but are not limited to, efforts to promote culturally appropriate care, to support the use of interpretation services where community need exists, and to work to increase the health literacy of patients.

Conclusion

Racial and ethnic health care disparities are significant problems, both to the individuals who seek care and to a society that prides itself on equal opportunity.4 The individual repercussions for the patient and physician are obvious and have been discussed. Racial and ethnic disparities in health care also constitute a major public health problem, affecting all members of society. For this reason, Healthy People 2010 established as its overarching goal the elimination of health disparities.132 Economic repercussions also exist, with disparities in health care related to disease complications, poorer health outcomes, and higher overall health care expenditures.4 For these reasons, disparities in health care are unacceptable. Physicians are also called upon for leadership in addressing this important issue.4 Efforts must be informed; however, there are clear needs for additional information on the nature, causes, and implications of health care disparities.4 Improved data collection is critically important to ongoing efforts to understand and eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in health care. At the very least, better delineation of those variables that must be included in multivariate analyses must be accomplished to ensure better understanding of the relative contribution of access and socioeconomic status, as well as patient, provider, and system factors, on the quality of health care for racial and ethnic minorities.

AMA Policy

The Council on Scientific Affairs believes that more action is clearly needed if physicians are to take the lead in improving the health care and health of minorities.

RECOMMENDATIONS

The following statements, recommended by the Council on Scientific Affairs, were adopted as AMA policy and directives at the 2003 AMA Interim Meeting:

  1. The AMA recognizes racial and ethnic health disparities as a major public health problem in the United States and as a barrier to effective medical diagnosis and treatment. (Policy)
  2. The AMA reaffirms the dedication of physicians to serving those in need of medial care and their commitment to the principle that no one shall be denied necessary medical care because of inability to pay for care (AMA Policy H-160.987). Furthermore, the AMA reaffirms its position of zero tolerance toward racially or culturally based disparities in health care (AMA Policy H-350.974). (Reaffirm Policy)
  3. The AMA will create a program on health disparities using expertise in science, medical education, and ethics to: (a) work with members of the Federation and other relevant medical and nonmedical organizations to make the health care community more aware of health disparities and their effect on health outcomes; (b) identify and help providers implement strategies to reduce disparities in health care; (c) advocate for the appropriate role of the profession in eliminating health care disparities; and (d) work with the US Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) under the DHHS-AMA Memorandum of Understanding supporting the goals of Healthy People 2010, including the elimination of health disparities. (Directive)
  4. The AMA encourages the development of evidence-based performance measures that adequately identify socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities in quality. Furthermore, the AMA supports the use of evidence-based guidelines to promote the consistency and equity of care for all persons. (Policy)


Also see AMA’s Health disparities Web site
 Table. Non-access-related Factors Contributing to Health Care Disparities
 

Examples

Causes

Patient Factors

Delayed care seeking, poor adherence to treatment regimens.

Low familiarity with disease/treatment, mistrust of physicians or medical system, poor recall or a misunderstanding of provider instructions.

Provider Factors

Individual bias, clinical uncertainty, and prior beliefs (stereotypes).

Bias/prior beliefs best understood in the context of society in which race and ethnicity are used to organize and give meaning to social interaction.

System Factors

Cultural/language barriers, time pressures, cost control efforts, and the geographic availability of health care.

Result from the way in which health care is organized and financed. Institutionalized bias.


 References
  1. Polednak AP. Racial and Ethnic Differences in Disease. New York: Oxford University Press; 1989.
  2. Johnson BL, Coulberson SL. Environmental epidemiologic issues and minority health. Ann Epidemiol. 1993;3:175-180.
  3. House JS. Understanding social factors and inequalities in health: 20th century progress and 21st century prospects. J Health Soc Behav. 2002;43:125-142.
  4. Smedly BD, Stith AY, Nelson AR. (Eds.) Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. Washington, DC; Institute of Medicine; 2002.
  5. VanGeest JB, Williams MA, Deitchman SD, et al. Classification Systems for Data on Race and Ethnicity. The Council on Scientific Affairs, American Medical Association; 2000.
  6. Collins KS, Hughes DL, Doty MM, Ives BL, Edwards JN, Tenney K. Diverse Communities, Common Concerns: Assessing Health Care Quality for Minority Americans. New York: The Commonwealth Fund; 2002.
  7. The Morehouse Medical Treatment and Effectiveness Center. Racial & Ethnic Differences in Access to Medical Care: A Synthesis of the Literature. Menlo Park, CA: The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation; 2000.
  8. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Report of the Secretary’s Task Force on Black and Minority Health. MMWR. 1986;35:109-112.
  9. Key Facts: Race, Ethnicity & Medical Care. Menlo Park, CA: The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation; 1999.
  10. Fiscella K, Franks P, Doescher MP, Saver BG. Disparities in health care by race, ethnicity, and language among the insured: Findings from a national sample. Med Care. 2002;40:52-59.
  11. Weinick RM, Zuvekas SH, Cohen JW. Racial and ethnic differences in access to care and use of health care services, 1977 to 1996. Med Care Res & Rev. 2000;57(Suppl 1):36-54.
  12. Collins KS, Hall A, Neuhaus C. U.S. Minority Health: A Chartbook. New York: The Commonwealth Fund; 1999.
  13. Fiscella K, Franks P, Clancy CM. Skepticism toward medical care and healthcare utilization. Med Care. 1998;36:180-189.
  14. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Demographic characteristics of persons without a regular source of medical care – selected states, 1995. JAMA. 1998;279:1603.
  15. Diehr P, Yergan J, Chu J, Feigl P, GlaefkeG, Moe R, Bergner M, Rodenbaugh J. Treatment modality and quality differences for black and white breast-cancer patients treated in community hospitals. Med Care. 1989;27:942-959.
  16. Harlan L, Brawley O, Pammerenke F. Geographic, age, and racial variation in the treatment of local/regional carcinoma of the prostate. J Clin Oncol. 1995;13:93-100
  17. Mitchell JB, McCormack LA. Time trends in late-stage diagnosis of cervical cancer: Differences by race/ethnicity and income. Med Care. 1997;35:1220-1224.
  18. McMahon LF, Wolfe RA, Huang S, Tedeschi P, Manning W, Edlund MJ. Racial and gender variation in the use of diagnostic colonic procedures in the Michigan Medicare population. Med Care. 1999;37:712-717.
  19. Bach PB, Cramer LD, Warren JL, Begg CB. Racial differences in the treatment of early-stage lung cancer. N Engl J Med. 1999;341:1198-1205.
  20. Imperato PJ, Nenner RP, Will TO. Radical prostatectomy: Lower rates among African-American Men. J Natl Med Assoc. 1996;88:589-594.
  21. Bernabei R, Gambassi G, Lapane K, Landi F, Gatsonis C, Dunlop R, Lipsitz L, Steel K, Mor V. Management of pain in elderly patients with cancer. SAGE Study Group. Systematic assessment of geriatric drug use via epidemiology. JAMA 1998;279:1877-1882.
  22. Burns RB, McCarthy EP, Freund KM, Marwill SL, Shwartz M, Ash A, Moskowitz MA. Black women receive less mammography even with similar use of primary care. Ann Intern Med. 1996;125:173-182.
  23. Cooper GS, Yuan Z, Landerfeld CS, Rimm AA. Surgery for colorectal cancer: Race-related differences in rates and survival among Medicare beneficiaries. Am J Public Health. 1996;86:582-586.
  24. Mayer WJ, McWhorter WP. Black/white differences in non-treatment of bladder cancer patients and implications for survival. Am J Public Health. 1989;79:772-774.
  25. Polednak AP, Flannery JT. Black versus white racial differences in clinical stage at diagnosis and treatment of prostatic cancer in Connecticut. Cancer. 1992;70:2152-2158.
  26. Hannan EL, Kilburn H Jr, O’Donnell JF, Lukacik G, Shields EP. Interracial access to selected cardiac procedures for patients hospitalized with coronary artery disease in New York state. Med Care. 1991;29:430-441.
  27. Sedlis SP, Fisher VJ, Tice D, Esposito R, Madmon L, Steinberg EH. Racial differences in performance of invasive cardiac procedures in a Department of Veterans Affairs medical center. J Clin Epidemiol. 1997;50:899-901.
  28. Kressin NR, Petersen LA. Racial differences in the use of invasive cardiovascular procedures: Review of the literature and prescription for future research. Ann Intern Med. 2001;135:352-366.
  29. Ayanian JZ, Weissman JS, Chasan-Taber S, Epstein AM. Quality of care by race and gender for congestive heart failure and pneumonia. Med Care. 1999;37:1260-1269.
  30. Petersen LA, Wright SM, Peterson ED, Daley J. Impact of race on cardiac care and outcomes in veterans with acute myocardial infarction. Med Care. 2002;40(Suppl):I86-I96.
  31. Carlisle DM, Leake BD, Shapiro MF. Racial and ethnic differences in the use of invasive cardiac procedures among cardiac patients in Los Angeles County, 1986 through 1988. Am J Public Health. 1995;85:352-356.
  32. Carlisle DM, Leake BD, Shapiro MF. Racial and ethnic differences in the use of cardiovascular procedures: Associations with type of health insurance. Am J Public Health. 1997;87:263-267.
  33. Ayanian JZ, Udvarhelyi IS, Gatsonis CA, Pashos CL, Epstein AM. Racial differences in the use of revascularization procedures after coronary angiography. JAMA. 1993;269:2642-2646.
  34. Whittle J, Conigliaro J, Good CB, Lofgren RP. Racial differences in the use of invasive cardiovascular procedures in the Department of Veterans Affairs medical system. N Engl J Med. 1993;329:621-627.
  35. Ramsey DJ, Goff DC, Wear ML, Labarthe DR, Nichaman MZ. Sex and ethnic differences in use of myocardial revascularization procedures in Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites: The Corpus Christi Heart Project. J Clin Epidemiol. 1997;50:603-609.
  36. Giles WH, Anda RF, Casper ML, Escobedo LG, Taylor HA. Race and sex differences in rates of invasive cardiac procedures in US hospitals. Data from the National Hospital Discharge Survey. Arch Intern Med. 1995;155:318-324.
  37. Peterson ED, Wright SM, Daley J, Thibault GE. Racial variation in cardiac procedure use and survival following acute myocardial infarction in the Department of Veterans Affairs. JAMA. 1994;271:1175-1180.
  38. Cowie CC, Harris MI. Ambulatory medical care for non-Hispanic whites, African Americans, and Mexican Americans with NIDDM in the U.S. Diabetes Care. 1995;20:142-147.
  39. Chin MH, Zhang JX, Merrell K. Diabetes in the African-American Medicare population: Morbidity, quality of care, and resource utilization. Diabetes Care. 1998;21:1090-1095.
  40. Harris MI, Eastman RC, Cowie CC, Flegal KM, Eberhardt MS. Racial and ethnic differences in glycemic control of adults with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes Care. 1999;22:403-408.
  41. Oddone EZ, Horner RD, Sloane R, McIntyre L, Ward A, Whittle J, Passman LJ, Kroupa L, Heaney R, Diem S, Matchar D. Race, presenting signs, and symptoms, use of carotid artery imaging, and appropriateness of carotid endarterectomy. Stroke. 1999;30:1350-1356.
  42. Gillium RF. Epidemiology of carotid endarterectomy and cerebral arteriography in the United States. Stroke. 1995;26:1724-1728.
  43. Mitchell JB, Ballard DJ, Matchar DB, Whisnant JP, Samsa GP. Racial variation in treatment for transient ischemic attacks: Impact of participation by neurologists. Health Serv Res. 2000;34:1413-1428.
  44. Moore RD, Stanton D, Gopalan R, Chaisson RE. Racial differences in the use of drug therapy for HIV disease in an urban community. New Engl J Med. 1994;330:763-768.
  45. Shapiro MF, Morton SC, McCaffrey DF, Senterfitt JW, Fleishman JA, Perlman JF, Athey LA, Keesey JW, Goldman DP, Berry SH, Bozette SA. Variations in the care of HIV-infected adults in the United States: Results from the HIV Cost and Services Utilization Study. JAMA. 1999;281:2305-2375.
  46. Kasiske B, London W, Ellison MD. Race and socioeconomic factors influencing early placement on the kidney transplant waiting list. J Am Soc Nephrology. 1998;9:2142-2147.
  47. Garg PP, Diener-West M, Powe NE. Reducing racial disparities in transplant activation: Whom should we target? Am J Kidney Dis. 2001;37:921-931.
  48. Epstein AM, Zyanian JZ, Keogh JH, Noonan SJ, Armistead N, Cleary PD, Weissman JS, David-Kasdan JA, Carlson D, Fuller J, March D, Conti R. Racial disparities in access to renal transplantation. N Engl J Med. 2000;343:1537-1544.
  49. Murry MD, Stang P, Tierny WM. Health care use by inner-city patients with asthma. J Clin Epidemiol. 1997;50:167-174.
  50. Zoratti EM, Havstad S, Rodriguez J, Robens-Paradise Y, LaFata JE, McCarthy B. Health service use by African Americans and Caucasians with asthma in a managed care setting. Am J Resp Crit Care Med. 1998;158:371-377.
  51. Krishnan JA, Diette GB, Skinner EA, Clark BD, Steinwachs D, Wu AW. Race and sex differences in consistency of care with national asthma guidelines in managed care organizations. Arch Intern Med. 2001;161:1660-1668.
  52. O’Malley AS, Mandelblatt J, Gold K, Cagney KA, Kerner J. Continuity of care and the use of breast and cervical cancer screening services in a multiethnic community. Arch Intern Med. 1997;157:1462-1470.
  53. Marin MG, Johanson WG Jr, Salas-Lopez D. Influenza vaccination among minority populations in the United States. Prev Med. 2002;34:235-241.
  54. Clancy CM, Franks P. Utilization of specialty and primary care: The impact of HMO insurance and patient-related factors. J Fam Pract. 1997;45:500-508.
  55. Burns RB, McCarthy EP, Freund KM, Marwill SL, Shwartz M, Ash A, Moskowitz MA. Black women receive less mammography even with similar use of primary care. Ann Intern Med. 1996;125:173-182.
  56. Lieu TA, Newacheck PW, McManus MA. Race, ethnicity, and access to ambulatory care among US adolescents. Am J Public Health. 1993;83:960-965.
  57. Zimmer-Gembeck MJ, Alexander T, Nystrom RJ. Adolescents report their need for and use of health care services. J Adolesc Health. 1997;21:388-389.
  58. Bartman BA, Moy E, D’Angelo LJ. Access to ambulatory care for adolescents: The role of usual source of care. J Health Care Poor Underserved. 1997;8:214-226.
  59. Weinick RM, Krauss NA. Race/ethnic differences in children’s access to care. Am J Public Health. 2000;90:1771-1774.
  60. Newacheck PW, Hughes DC, Stoddard JJ. Children’s access to primary care: Differences by race, income, and insurance status. Pediatrics. 1996;97:26-32.
  61. Stevens GD, Shi L. Racial and ethnic disparities in the quality of primary care for children. J Fam Pract. 2002;51:573.
  62. Wilson KM, Klein JD. Adolescents who use the emergency department as their usual source of care. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2000;154:361-365.
  63. Wood DL, Hayward RA, Core CR, Freeman HE, Shapiro MF. Access to medical care for children and adolescents in the United States. Pediatrics. 1990;86:666-672.
  64. Seid M, Simmes DR, Linton LS, Leah CE, Edwards CC, Peddecord KM. Correlates of vaccination for Hepatitis B among adolescents. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Health. 2001;155:921-926.
  65. Middleman AB, Robertson LM, Young C, Durant RH, Emans SJ. Predictors of time to completion of the Hepatitis B vaccination series among adolescents. J Adolesc Health. 1999;25:323-327.
  66. Hahn BA. Children’s health: Racial and ethnic differences in the use of prescription medications. Pediatrics. 1995;95:727-732.
  67. Chen AY, Chang RR. Factors associated with prescription drug expenditures among children: An analysis of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. Pediatrics. 2002;109:728-732.
  68. McCormich MC, Kass B, Elixhauser A, Thompson J, Simpson L. Annual report on access to and utilization of health care for children and youth in the United States – 1999. Pediatrics. 2000;105:219-230.
  69. Mayberry RM, Mili F, Ofili E. Racial and ethnic differences in access to medical care. Med Care Res Rev. 2000;57:108-145.
  70. Schneider EC, Leape LL, Weissman JS, Piana RN, Gatsonis C, Epstein AM. Racial differences in cardiac revascularization rates: Does "overuse" explain higher rates among white patients? Ann Intern Med. 2001;135:328-337.
  71. Weitzman S, Cooper L, Chambless L, Rosamond W, Clegg L, Marcucci G, Romm F, White A. Gender, racial, and geographic differences in the performance of cardiac diagnostic and therapeutic procedures for hospitalized acute myocardial infarction in four states. Am J Cardio. 1997;79:722-726.
  72. Allison JJ, Kiefe CI, Centor RM, Box JB, Farmer RM. Racial differences in the medical treatment of elderly Medicare patients with acute myocardial infarction. J Gen Intern Med. 1996;11:736-743.
  73. Laouri M, Kravitz RL, French WJ, Yang I, Milliken JC, Hilborne L, Wachsner R, Brook RH. Underuse of coronary revascularization procedures: Application of a clinical method. J Am Coll Cardio. 1997;29:891-897.
  74. Canto JG, Allison JJ, Kiefe CI, Fincher C, Farmer R, Sekar P, Person S, Weissman NW. Relation of race and sex to the use of reperfusion therapy in Medicare beneficiaries with acute myocardial infarction. New Engl J Med. 2000;342:1094-1100.
  75. Peterson ED, Shaw LK, DeLong ER, Pryor DB, Califf RM, Mark DB. Racial variation in the use of coronary-revascularization procedures: Are the differences real? Do they matter? New Engl J Med. 1997;336:480-486.
  76. Brett KM, Schoendorf KC, Kiley JL. Differences between black and white women in the use of prenatal care technologies. Am J Ob Gyn. 1994;170:41-46.
  77. Kogan MD, Kotelchuck M, Alexander GR, Johnson WE. Racial disparities in reported prenatal care advice from health care providers. Am J Public Health. 1994;84:82-88.
  78. Melfi CA, Croghan TW, Hanna MP, Robinson RL. Racial variation in antidepressant treatment in a Medicaid population. J Clin Psychiatry. 2000;61:16-21.
  79. Hoenig H, Rubinstein L, Kahn K. Rehabilitation and hip fracture – equal opportunity for all? Arch Phy Med Rehab. 1996;77:58-63.
  80. Harda ND, Chun A, Chiu V, Pakalniskis A. Patterns of rehabilitation utilization after hip fracture in acute hospitals and skilled nursing facilities. Med Care. 2000;38:1119-1130.
  81. White-Means SI. Racial patterns in disabled elderly persons’ use of medical services. J Gerontol. 2000;55B:S76-S89.
  82. Department of Health and Human Services. Mental Health: Culture, Race, and Ethnicity. A Supplement to Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General. Washington, DC: U.S. Public Health Service; 2000.
  83. Borowsky SJ, Rubenstein LV, Meredith LS, Camp P, Jackson-Tricle, Wells KB. Who is at risk of nondetection of mental health problems in primary care? J Gen Intern Med. 2000;15:381-388.
  84. Strakowski SM, Hawkins JM, Keck PE, McElroy SL, West SA, Bourne ML, Sax KW, Tugrul KC. The effect of race and information variance on diagnosis between psychiatric emergency service and research diagnosis in first-episode psychosis. J Clin Psychiatry. 1997;58:457-463.
  85. Todd KH, Lee T, Hoffman JR. The effect of ethnicity on physician estimates of pain severity in patients with isolated trauma. JAMA. 1994;271:925-928.
  86. Porter LE, Ku L. Use of reproductive health services among young men, 1995. J Adolesc Health. 2000;27:186-194.
  87. Crosby RA, St. Lawrence J. Adolescents’ use of school-based health clinics for reproductive health services: Data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. J Sch Health. 2000;70:22-27.
  88. Gornick ME, Egers PW, Reilly TW, Mentnech RM, Fitterman LK, Kucken LE, Vladeck BC. Effects of race and income on mortality and use of services among Medicare beneficiaries. New Engl J Med. 1996;335:791-799.
  89. Blackstock AW, Herndon JE, Paskett ED, Perry MC, Graziano SL, Muscato JJ, Kosty MP, Akerley WL, Holland J, Fleishman S, Green MR. Outcomes among African-American/non-African-American patients with advanced non-small-cell lung carcinoma: Report from the Cancer and Leukemia Group B. J Nat Cancer Instit. 2002;94:284-290.
  90. Williams DR. Racial/ethnic variations in women’s health: The social embeddedness of health. AJPH. 2002;92:588-597.
  91. Williams DR. Race, SES, and health: The added effects of racism and discrimination. Ann N Y Acad Soc. 1999;896:173-188.
  92. Pincus T, Esther R, DeWalt DA, Callahan LF. Social conditions and self-management are more powerful determinants of health than access to care. Ann Intern Med. 1998;129:406-411.
  93. Polednak AP. Segregation, Poverty, and Mortality in Urban African Americans. New York: Oxford University Press; 1997.
  94. Alder NE, Boyce T, Chesney MA, Folkman S, Syme SL. Socioeconomic inequalities in health: No easy solution. JAMA. 1993;269:3140-3145.
  95. House JS, Williams DR. Understanding and reducing socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities in health. In Smedley BD, Syme SL (Eds.) Promoting Health: Intervention Strategies from Social and Behavioral Research. Washington DC: National Academy Press; 2000.
  96. Shavers VL, Brown ML. Racial and ethnic disparities in the receipt of cancer treatment. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2002;94:334-357.
  97. Bennet CL, Horner RD, Weinstein RA, Dickinson GM, Dehovitz JA, Cohn SE, Kessler HA, Jacobson J, Goetz MB, Simberkoff M, Pitrak D, George WL, Gilman SC, Shapiro MF. Racial differences in care among hospitalized patients with pneumocyctis carinii pneumonia in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Miami, and Raleigh-Durham. Arch Intern Med. 1995;155:1586-1592.
  98. Cunningham WE, Mosen DM, Morales LS. Ethnic and racial differences in long-term survival from hospitalizations for HIV infection. J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2000;11:163-178.
  99. Spillman BC. The impact of being uninsured on utilization of basic health care services. Inquiry. 1992;29:457-466.
  100. Lillie-Blanton M, Martinez RM, Salganicoff A. Site of medical care: Do racial and ethnic differences persist? Yale J Health Pol Law Ethics. 2001;1:1-17.
  101. Shi L. Experience of primary care by racial and ethnic groups in the United States. Medical Care. 1999;37:1068-1077.
  102. Weissman JS, Stern R, Fielding SL, Epstein AM. Delayed access to health care: Risk factors, reasons, and consequences. Ann Intern Med. 1991;114:325-331.
  103. Raczynski JM, Taylor H, Cutter G, Hardin M, Rappaport N, Oberman A. Diagnoses, symptoms, and attribution of symptoms among black and white inpatients admitted for coronary heart disease. Am J Public Health. 1994;84:951-956.
  104. David RA, Rhee M. The impact of language as a barrier to effective health care in an underserved urban Hispanic community. Mt Sinai J Med. 1998;65:393-397.
  105. Swanson GM, Ward AJ. Recruiting minorities into clinical trials: Toward a participant-friendly system. J Natl Cancer Inst. 1995;87:1747-1759.
  106. Lindau ST, Tomori C, McCarville MA, Bennett CL. Improving rates of cervical cancer screening and Pap smear follow-up for low-income women with limited health literacy. Cancer Invest. 2001;19:316-323.
  107. Sanderson BK, Raczynski JM, Cornell CE, Hardin M, Taylor HA. Ethnic disparities in patient recall of physician recommendations of diagnostic and treatment procedures for coronary disease. AJE. 1998;148:741-749.
  108. Doescher MP, Saver BG, Franks P, Fiscella K. Racial and ethnic disparities in perceptions of physician style and trust. Arch Fam Med. 2000;9:1156-1163.
  109. Cho J, Solis BM. Healthy Families Culture and Linguistics Resources Survey: A Physician Perspective on their Diverse Member Population. Los Angeles: LA Care Health Plan, 2001
  110. Perez-Stable EJ, Napoles-Springer A, Miramontes JM. The effects of ethnicity and language on medical outcomes of patients with hypertension or diabetes. Med Care. 1997;35:1212-1219.
  111. Tai-Seale M, Croghan TW, Obenchain R. Determinants of antidepressant treatment compliance: Implications for policy. Med Care Res Rev. 2000;57:491-512.
  112. Rice T. The Impact of Cost Containment Efforts on Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care: A Conceptualization. In Smedly BD, Stith AY, Nelson AR. (Eds.) Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethic Disparities in Healthcare. Washington DC; Institute of Medicine, 2002.
  113. Kahn KL, Pearson ML, Harrison ER, Desmond KA, Rogers WH, Rubenstein LV, Brook RH, Keeler EB. Health care for black and poor hospitalized Medicare patients. JAMA. 1994;271:1207-1208.
  114. Morrison RS, Wallenstein S, Natale DK, Senzel RS, Huang LL. "We don’t carry that" –failure of pharmacies in predominantly nonwhite neighborhoods to stock opioid analgesics. N Engl J Med. 2000;342:1023-1026.
  115. Leigh WA, Lillie-Blanton M, Martinez RM, Collins KS. Managed care in three states: Experiences of low-income African Americans and Hispanics. Inquiry. 1999;36:318-331.
  116. Tai-Seale M, Freund D, LoSasso A. Racial disparities in service use among Medicaid beneficiaries after mandatory enrollment in managed care: A difference-in-differences approach. Inquiry. 2001;38:49-59.
  117. Rosenbaum S. Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Healthcare: Issues in the Design, Structure, and Administration of Federal Healthcare Financing Programs Supported through Direct Public Funding. In Smedly BD, Stith AY, Nelson AR. (Eds.) Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethic Disparities in Healthcare. Washington DC; Institute of Medicine, 2002.
  118. van Ryn M, Burke J. The effect of patient race and socio-economic status on physician’s perceptions of patients. Soc Sci Med. 2000;50:813-828.
  119. van Ryn M. Research on the provider contribution to race/ethnic disparities in medical care. Medical Care. 2002;40:I140-I151.
  120. Balsa A, McGuire TG. Prejudice, uncertainty and stereotypes as sources of health care disparities. Boston University, unpublished manuscript.
  121. Bird ST, Bogart LM. Perceived race-based and socioeconomic status (SES)-based discrimination in interactions with health care providers. Ethn Dis. 2001;11:554-563.
  122. Conigliaro J, Whittle J, Good CB, Hanusa BH, Passman LJ, Lofgren RP, Allman R, Ubel PA, O’Connor M, Macpherson DS. Understanding racial variation in the use of coronary revascularization procedures. Arch Intern Med. 2000;160:1329-1335.
  123. Kressin NR, Clark JA, Whittle J, East M, Peterson ED, Chang B, Rosen AK, Ren XS, Alley LG, Kroupa L, Collins TC, Petersen LA. Racial differences in health-related beliefs, attitudes, and experiences of VA cardiac patients: Scale development and application. Med Care. 2002;40:I72-I85.
  124. Mort EA, Weissman JS, Epstein AM. Physician discretion and racial variation in the use of surgical procedures. Arch Intern Med. 1994;154:761-767.
  125. Weisse CS, Sorum PC, Sanders KN, Syat BL. Do gender and race affect decisions about pain management? J Gen Intern Med. 2001;16:211-217.
  126. Holmes-Rovner M, Valade D, Orlowski C, Draus C, Nabozny-Valerio B, Keiser S. Implementing shared decision-making in routine practice: Barriers and opportunities. Health Expect. 2000;3:182-191.
  127. Eisenberg JM. Doctors’ Decisions and the Costs of Medical Care. Ann Arbor, MI: Health Administration Press, 1986
  128. Bloche MG. Race and discretion in American medicine. Yale J Health Pol Law Ethics. 2001;1:95-131.
  129. Bird CE, Conrad P, Fremont AM. (eds) Handbook of Medical Sociology. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2000.
  130. See KO, Wilson WJ. Race and ethnicity. In: Smelser NJ, ed..Handbook of Sociology. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications, 1988.
  131. Lamont M, Fournier M. (eds) Cultivating Differences: Symbolic Boundaries and the Making of Inequality. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1993.
  132. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Healthy People 2010. McLean, VA: International Medical Publishing, Inc, 2000
  133. Shortell SM, Waters TM, Clarke KWB, Budetti PP. Physicians as double agents: Maintaining trust in an era of multiple accountabilities. JAMA. 1998;280:1102-1108.
  134. Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs. Ethical issues in managed care. JAMA. 1995;273:330-335.
  135. Pellegrino ED. Medical professionalism: Can it, should it survive? J Am Board Fam Pract. 2000;13:147-149.
  136. Principles of Medical Ethics. Chicago, IL: American Medical Association, 2002.
  137. Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs. Code of Medical Ethics. Chicago, IL: American Medical Association, 2002.
  138. Wynia MK, Latham SR, Kao AC, Berg JW, Emanuel LL. Medical professionalism in society. New Engl J Med. 1999;341:1612-1616.
  139. Swick HM. Professionalism: A key to weathering the storm. Obstet Gynecol. 2001;98:156-161.
  140. McCally M, Haines A, Fein O, Addington W, Lawrence RS, Cassel CK. Poverty and ill health: Physicians can, and should, make a difference. Ann Intern Med. 1998;129:726-733.
  141. Chervenak FA, McCullough LB. The moral foundation of medical leadership: The professional virtues of the physician as fiduciary of the patient. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2001;184:875-879.
  142. Kleinman LC. Health care in crisis: A proposed role for the individual physician as advocate. JAMA. 1991;265:1991-1992.
  143. Peters KE, Elster AB. Roadmaps for Clinical Practice: A Primer on Population-Based Medicine. Chicago, IL: American Medical Association, 2002
  144. Cooper LA, Hill MN, Powe NR. Designing and evaluating interventions to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in health care. J Gen Intern Med. 2002;17:477-486.
  145. Kirkegaard MA. The physician’s role in health care reform. J Am Board Fam Pract. 1993;6:428-429.
  146. Jacobs E, Wynia MK. Professional responsibility, trust, and racial disparities in health care. Unpublished manuscript.
  147. Fiscella K, Franks P, Gold MR, Clancy CM. Inequality in quality: Addressing socioeconomic, racial, and ethnic disparities in health care. JAMA. 2000;283:2579-2584.
  148. Ganz DA, Glynn RJ, Mogun H, Knight EL, Bohn RL, Avorn J. Adherence to guidelines for oral anticoagulation after venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. J Gen Intern Med. 2000;15:776-781.
  149. Ronsaville DS, Hakim RB. Well child care in the United States: Racial differences in compliance with guidelines. Am J Public Health. 2000;90:1436-1443.
  150. Krishnan JA, Diette GB, Skinner EA, Clark BD, Steinwachs D, Wu AW. Race and sex differences in consistency of care with national asthma guidelines in managed care organizations. Arch Intern Med. 2001;161:1660-1668.
  151. Owen WF Jr, Szczech LA, Frankenfield DL. Healthcare system interventions for inequality in quality: Corrective action through evidence-based medicine. J Natl Med Assoc. 2002;94(8 Suppl):83S-91S.
  152. Cabana MD, Flores G. The role of clinical practice guidelines in enhancing quality and reducing racial/ethnic disparities in pediatrics. Paediatr Respir Rev. 2002;3:52-58.

CSAPH home page
Reports by topic

Last updated: Feb 21, 2008
Content provided by: CSAPH


Privacy Statement | Advertise with us
Copyright 1995-2008 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.