How Race-Based Policies and Real Estate Practices Shaped Today’s Health Inequity Hot Spots
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- Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024
- David Norris, researcher from the Kirwan Institute, explores the link between history and health, with an emphasis on the need to include race as a necessary part of the conversation to correct health disparities.
Genesis Rivera, California Baptist University
1. Infant mortality is the death of an infant within the first year of life.
2. The leading causes of infant mortality are a low birth weight, premature birth, sudden infant death syndrome, maternal complications of pregnancy, and injuries such as suffocation
3. Areas with poor birth outcomes also exhibit shorter life expectancies and poor health outcomes such as asthma and diabetes.
4. Homes were appraised not solely on the home itself, but also on those who lived in the home.
5. The number of adverse childhood experiences an individual faces directly correlates with health outcomes as an adult.
Roxanne Beye
California Baptist University
1. SES is lower for mothers who are single, less educated, and African American
2. There is overlap between STDs and infant mortality rates
3. Teen birth is a risk factor of infant mortality
4. Less than 1% of African Americans were able to obtain a mortgage from 1930-1960
5. Appraisers assessed neighborhoods on the basis of the people that lived in them
Krutika Vaghashiya: Rutgers University
The number of adverse childhood experiences an individual faces directly correlates with health outcomes as an adult. Infant mortality is the death of an infant within the first year of life. The leading causes of infant mortality are low birth weight, premature birth, sudden infant death syndrome, maternal complications of pregnancy, and injuries such as suffocation
Genesis Rivera, California Baptist University
JP- East Carolina University
Leslie D. Montano
California Baptist University
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Christabel Querubin-Nguyen
California Baptist Univiersity
1. The socioeconomic status (SES) is lower for mothers who are single, less educated, and African American.
2. SES effects seen in between 2-12 months places infants at a higher for mortality.
3. There is a direct relationship between historical patterns of systemic discrimination and today’s community-based health challenges.
4. It is important to connect patients with needed resources at all stages of their pregnancy and to remain involved after death.
5. People of color are racially segregated into disinvested communities causing lack access to healthcare, other necessary assets to thrive.
Jazmyn Jordan
California Baptist University
1. Infant mortality leading causes are birth defects, born to small, born to early, SIDS, maternal complications of pregnancy, and injuries.
2. African Americans are more likely to suffer from infant mortality versus Caucasian individuals.
3. In the early 1900’s