- By Megan Izen
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Color Lines
- Feb 08, 2006
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- President Bush's healthcare privatization plan will only worsen
glaring disparities affecting communities of color, according to
advocates and researchers who argue that public solutions are both
possible and necessary to close the racial and economic gap in the
nation's deepening health crisis.
People of color are at significantly higher risk to suffer from cancer,
asthma, mortality among adults and infants and diabetes, among other
diseases. Infant mortality rates are nearly two times higher among
African-American infants; and Latinos, African Americans and Native
Americans/Alaska Natives are at least three times as likely as whites to
receive late or no prenatal care, according to the Kaiser Family
Foundation.
Compounding these health disparities, Census data shows that African
Americans are twice as likely as whites to be uninsured, and Latinos are
three times more likely. Legislators and advocates fear that these
numbers would rapidly increase under Bush's proposed strategy to promote
private health insurance via tax credits.
"We need to focus on providing access to quality healthcare coverage to
everyone, not on band-aid solutions like health savings accounts," said
California Assemblymember Wilma Chan, who introduced a bill in 2005 to
provide healthcare to over 1 million uninsured children in California.
Vetoed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Health Access for Kids Bill
will be reintroduced in the 2006 legislative session.
"I was shocked that there was no mention of the problems plaguing the
new Medicare drug benefit program or ways to fix it. Thousands of
seniors, including many poor older adults, are facing life-threatening
situations because they cannot get their medications," said Chan, who
chairs the Assembly Health Committee. "If anything, these problems will
exacerbate racial and economic health disparities rather than closing
the gap."
Tammy Johnson, director of Race and Public Policy, a research and
advocacy program based in Oakland that works to address racial
inequities through policy strategies, agrees that privatization will set
back the struggle for equitable access to healthcare in the U.S.
"These policies will undermine the work of legislators and advocates who
have been working toward equal access in healthcare. We want to see
policies that ensure high quality care for all Americans, not just the
privileged few," Johnson said.
Small business owners, those who Bush claims will benefit from the tax
credits, are also skeptical of its likely rewards.
"It's simply not going to work," said Diana Hess, a small business owner
interviewed by the Idaho Community Action Network, which recently
surveyed 100 small businesses in Preston, ID. "The other businesses in
my community feel that tax credits just aren't enough. The costs are too
high. What we really need from the President is a public insurance
program that all owners and their employees can access for quality
care."
According to a 2005 report by the Applied Research Center and the
Northwest Federation of Community Organizations, which studied solutions
to race-based health disparities, local governments and community
organizations have spearheaded innovative ways to address health issues.
Santa Clara County, California launched a "Children's Health Initiative"
that reduced the number of uninsured children in the county by 62
percent, most of whom are Latino or Asian, in just one year.
"There are successful public alternatives that can begin to erode the
system of inequities that deny too many people of color adequate access
to healthcare in this country," said Rinku Sen, communications director
of the Applied Research Center.
Despite the fact that advocates have been fighting to keep racial and
economic disparities at the forefront of discussions of equitable
healthcare solutions in recent years, this administration has refused to
acknowledge them.
"As the entire nation struggles, the President would like us to forget
that health disparities continue to run along the color line, demanding
a solution that looks toward the margins," Sen added. "President Bush
should develop solutions that work for all Americans, not just the
wealthy and white. Private solutions aggravate disparities. Public
solutions have eliminated them."
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Megan Izen is a writing fellow with ColorLines magazine.
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