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Camara Phyllis Jones, MD, MPH, PhDResearch Director on Social Determinants of Health and EquityEmerging Investigations and Analytic Methods BranchDivision of Adult and Community HealthNational Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health PromotionCoordinating Center for Health PromotionCenters for Disease Control and Prevention.
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1. Social Determinants of Health Social Determinants of Equity
2. Camara Phyllis Jones, MD, MPH, PhD
Research Director on Social Determinants of Health and Equity
Emerging Investigations and Analytic Methods Branch
Division of Adult and Community Health
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Coordinating Center for Health Promotion
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
17. But how do disparities arise? Differences in the quality of care received within the health care system
Differences in access to health care, including preventive and curative services
Differences in life opportunities, exposures, and stresses that result in differences in underlying health status
18. Through inequities
19. Through inequities
20. Through inequities
21. Through inequities
43. Addressing the social determinants of health Involves the medical care and public health systems, but clearly extends beyond these
Requires collaboration with multiple sectors outside of health, including education, housing, labor, justice, transportation, agriculture, and environment
44. Addressing the social determinants of equity Involves monitoring for inequities in exposures and opportunities, as well as for disparities in outcomes
Involves examination of structures, policies, practices, norms, and values to answer, How are these inequities being maintained?
Requires intervention on societal structures and attention to systems of power
45. We need to do both Address the social determinants of health, including poverty, in order to achieve large and sustained improvements in health outcomes
Address the social determinants of equity, including racism, in order to achieve social justice and eliminate health disparities
46. Levels of racism Institutionalized
Personally-mediated
Internalized
47. Institutionalized racism Differential access to the goods, services, and opportunities of society, by race
Examples
Housing, education, employment, income
Medical facilities
Clean environment
Information, resources, voice
Explains the association between SES and race
48. Personally-mediated racism Differential assumptions about the abilities, motives, and intents of others, by race
Prejudice and discrimination
Examples
Police brutality
Physician disrespect
Shopkeeper vigilance
Waiter indifference
Teacher devaluation
49. Internalized racism Acceptance by the stigmatized races of negative messages about our own abilities and intrinsic worth
Examples
Self-devaluation
White mans ice is colder
Resignation, helplessness, hopelessness
Accepting limitations to our full humanity
50. Levels of Racism: A Gardeners Tale
51. Who is the gardener? Power to decide
Power to act
Control of resources
Dangerous when
Allied with one group
Not concerned with equity But there is a very important question that I have not raised so far. Who is the gardener? It is the one with agency and the control of resources, and in this country that is the government. It is particularly dangerous when the gardener is allied with one group over others (you see I have colored the gardener red, explaining the preference for red flowers). It is also dangerous when the gardener is not concerned with equity. If she had been, she would have asked the question why the pink flowers were not faring so well. Just asking the question would have led her to seek solutions.
So that is the end of my story on levels of racism. The story was meant to illustrate the different levels of racism and how they are related, and to highlight that institutionalized racism is the most fundamental level. If you want to make real change in the garden, you have to at least deal with the institutionalized racism, even as you might also want to address the other two levels. Also, when you do address the institutionalized racism, the other levels will fix themselves over time.
But there is a very important question that I have not raised so far. Who is the gardener? It is the one with agency and the control of resources, and in this country that is the government. It is particularly dangerous when the gardener is allied with one group over others (you see I have colored the gardener red, explaining the preference for red flowers). It is also dangerous when the gardener is not concerned with equity. If she had been, she would have asked the question why the pink flowers were not faring so well. Just asking the question would have led her to seek solutions.
So that is the end of my story on levels of racism. The story was meant to illustrate the different levels of racism and how they are related, and to highlight that institutionalized racism is the most fundamental level. If you want to make real change in the garden, you have to at least deal with the institutionalized racism, even as you might also want to address the other two levels. Also, when you do address the institutionalized racism, the other levels will fix themselves over time.
52. Our tasks Put racism on the agenda
Name racism as a force determining the distribution of other social determinants of health
Routinely monitor for differential exposures, opportunities, and outcomes by race
53. Our tasks Ask, How is racism operating here?
Identify mechanisms in structures, policies, practices, and norms
Attend to both what exists and what is lacking
54. Our tasks Organize and strategize to act
Join in grassroots organizing around the conditions of peoples lives
Identify the structural factors creating and perpetuating those conditions
Link with similar efforts across the country and around the world