
The Issue
Certain racial and ethnic populations in the United States suffer from worse health and receive lower-quality health care than whites—regardless of where they live, their income or their health insurance coverage.
Why It Matters
Policy Context
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) calls for increased tracking of patient race and ethnicity, a key step in identifying and reducing disparities. While there are many causes of health disparities, some are easier to fix than others. Poverty, racism and personal health behaviors are very difficult to influence. But whether a doctor or hospital delivers consistent, quality health care can be evaluated and influenced through specific systemic and policy changes. And since the 2003 publication of the Institute of Medicine’s seminal report on racial and ethnic disparities in American health care, “Unequal Treatment,” it is a topic that has received significant attention from state and federal policy-makers.
At no time in U.S. history has the health status of minority populations equaled or even approximated that of whites. With few exceptions, all racial and ethnic minorities experience higher rates of illness and death than non-minorities.
Source: Institute of Medicine