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Health Equity

Health Equity

Health Equity

Racial health disparities first appear at birth and never go away. Black babies have higher infant mortality rates than their white peers; black mothers die in childbirth at three times the rate of white mothers; and black Americans, despite having roughly the same occurrence of cardiovascular disease as white Americans, are thirty percent more likely to die from it.

In order to eliminate racial/ethnic and gender disparities in health, we must investigate the sociocultural, economic, and structural indicators of health in both risk assessment and risk prevention efforts. Cook Center researchers, often through the Center’s Health Equity Working Group, use an interdisciplinary approach to move beyond the acknowledgement of disparities toward a more complete understanding the root causes of both positive and negative health outcomes. From there, they inform practitioners, researchers and community health organizers on strength-based approaches to health.

The Health Equity Working Group uses a holistic approach to understanding and achieving health equity. Investigating the sociocultural, economic, and structural indicators of health is necessary in both risk assessment and risk prevention efforts to eliminate racial/ethnic and gender disparities in health. The Health Equity Working Group deploys an interdisciplinary approach to move beyond the acknowledgement of disparities toward understanding the root causes of both positive and negative health outcomes. We use this understanding to inform practitioners, researchers, and community health organizers on strength-based approaches to health. Our working group includes the broad intersections of race, gender, wealth, and health.

 

Team Members

Research & Publications

football players' hands holding ball

Message Received? The Effect of Academic Socialization on NCAA Athletes’ Grades

Authors: Paul A. Robbins and Keisha Bentley L. Edwards Abstract: National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)…

man bent over with head placed down in hands

Growing sense of social status threat and concomitant deaths of despair among whites

Authors: Arjumand Siddiqi, Odmaa Sod-Erdene, Darrick Hamilton, Tressie McMillan Cottom, and William Darity Jr.  Abstract:…

What Matters More, Maternal Characteristics or Differential Returns for Having Them? Using Decomposition Analysis to Explain Black-White Racial Disparities in Infant Mortality in the United States

Authors: Chantel Ramraj, Arjumand Siddiqi, Salimah El-Amin and Darrick Hamilton Abstract: Studies have found that…

Inequity in Place: Obesity Disparities and the Legacy of Racial Residential Segregation and Social Immobility

Authors: Imari Z. Smith, Loneke T. Blackman Carr, Salimah El-Amin, Keisha L. Bentley-Edwards, and William…

Race, Unemployment, and Mental Health in the USA

Authors: Timothy M. Diette, Arthur H. Goldsmith, Darrick Hamilton, and William Darity Jr Abstract: Social…

Exposure to Biracial Faces Reduces Colorblindness

Authors: Sarah E.Gaither,  Negin R. Toosi, Laura G. Babbitt, and Samuel R. Sommers   Abstract: Across six…

Demonstrators march down Constitution Avenue during the March on Washington on Aug. 28, 1963.

From a Tangle of Pathology to a Race-Fair America

Authors: Alan Aja, Daniel Bustillo, William Darity Jr., and Darrick Hamilton Excerpt: Post-racialists often confirm…

Fighting at Birth: Eradicating the Black-White Infant Mortality Gap

Authors: Imari Z. Smith, Keisha L. Bentley-Edwards, Salimah El-Amin and William Darity, Jr Introduction: The infant…