| Associated Black Charities' Health Disparities Initiative
Eliminating African American Health Disparities in New York
City
Through
Knowledge, Insurance, Treatment,
and Advocacy.
Martin Luther King once observed that "Of all the
forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most
shocking and inhumane."
Thirty-eight years after his death and 42 years after the
passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, American society
can lay claim to justified pride in the improvements of racial
equity made in employment, housing, education, civil rights,
and voting rights. Much has been accomplished, but the complete
elimination of racial disparity and discrimination remains
elusive.
In no other fundamental aspect of American life is Dr. King’s
observation truer than in the lack of access to and failed
delivery of quality health care to African Americans. By most
accepted measurements of health care standards, African Americans
present a disproportionately worse picture than their majority
counterparts. African Americans in New York City and across
the country have shorter life expectancy, higher rates of
premature death, higher infant mortality, and higher incidence
of major killer diseases such as HIV/AIDS, heart ailment,
diabetes, hypertension, cancer, and obesity.
Such is the strength of the evidence of racial inequality
of American health care that the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services prophesied in its “Guiding Principle
for Improving Minority Health” that:
“The future of health of the nation will be determined
to a large extent by how effectively we work with communities
to reduce and eliminate health disparities between non-minority
and minority populations experiencing disproportionate burdens
of diseases, disability, and premature death.”
Recognizing the central importance of great health to high
educational achievement as well as social and economic success,
Associated Black Charities has initiated KITA (Knowledge,
Insurance, Treatment, and Advocacy) to help eliminate health
disparities in New York City.
|