But there are issues of disparity and there are issues relative to racism that operate in a very broad context." Some racial differences are more nuances. It is more likely to have to do with socioeconomics and political issues of bias as well as physiologic and genetic issues that go into that same bucket. That something is less likely to be genetic. Race is a placeholder for something else. At the end of the day, all of us acknowledge that race is a very poor physiological construct. "It forces us to think very carefully about the very volatile issue of race and what race means. "We must recognize there are some arbitrary issues that are present in the way we practice medicine and dole out health care," Yancy tells WebMD. But, he says, there are unique issues that affect black Americans. Naturally, diseases and responses to treatment do vary from person to person. Yancy says that all humans have the same physiology, are vulnerable to the same illnesses, and respond to the same medicines. Yancy, MD, associate dean of clinical affairs and medical director for heart failure/transplantation at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. So does the environment in which people live, socioeconomic status - and, yes, racism, says Clyde W.
African-American women have a 20% higher cancer death rate than white women. Yet black men have a 40% higher cancer death rate than white men. Cancer treatment is equally successful for all races.Nearly 42% of black men and more than 45% of black women aged 20 and older have high blood pressure. Blacks develop high blood pressure earlier in life - and with much higher blood pressure levels - than whites.Blacks have nearly twice the first-time stroke risk of whites. Strokes kill 4 times more 35- to 54-year-old black Americans than white Americans.Despite lower tobacco exposure, black men are 50% more likely than white men to get lung cancer.The disease recently killed former NFL star Reggie White at age 43. Deaths from lung scarring - sarcoidosis - are 16 times more common among blacks than among whites.African-Americans are three times more likely to die of asthma than white Americans.Blacks are up to 2.5 times more likely to suffer a limb amputation and up to 5.6 times more likely to suffer kidney disease than other people with diabetes. Diabetes is 60% more common in black Americans than in white Americans.Yet we're closer to the beginning of the fight than to the end. And the evidence so far indicates that these investments will pay health dividends not just for racial minorities, but for everyone. It means investments targeted to the health of black Americans. It means overcoming disparities in health care. It means changing the system for testing new drugs. Several deadly diseases strike black Americans harder and more often than they do white Americans.įighting back means genetic research.