HEALTH/SCIENCE
Johns Hopkins: Seeking a Cure for Health Disparities Among Hispanics
The
by Jeff Simmons goal: to identify the underlying structure of health competence and its value as a predictor of access to care among the Latino population in
use of mass media and other sources. What researchers discovered from the 383 homes with at least one self-reported Latino person 21 years or older was an Baltimore. amazingly high response rate of 349 participants, or 91 perThe process: data were collected from 330 foreign-born cent. After removing 17 who were U.S.-born and two others Latino men and women between the ages of 21 and 75 resid- for missing information, the sample included 330 foreigning in the Maryland city. born respondents. The study, conducted under the auspices of the Johns The findings: 63 percent said it was difficult for Latinos to Hopkins Center for Health Disparities Solutions, aimed to get health care in the United States. The main reasons they examine the relationships between background variables, provided for this view were costs and language – 46 percent health competence and health behavior. each, and legal status – 23 percent. Researchers collected data under an innovative program to Amid a burgeoning Latino population in the country, wrote the authors: “Latinos also experience health disparities in access to care that if not addressed, can result in suboptimal quality of life, loss of productivity, and increased healthcare costs at the societal level.” “The goal of this study was to identify underlying factors contributing to these health disparities in order to inform culturally appropriate action. This type of action is essential to start bridging the Latino health disparity gap at the national policy level, as well as the healthcare delivery at community or institutional levels,” they wrote. The study endeavored to chart new ground, by exploring and identifying the underDr. Fannie Fonseca-Becker, associate scientist, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health lying factors that lead to lower access to health care. And it increase the access that Hispanics had to eye health care, concentrated on the foreign-born Latino population because a drawing information from eight randomly selected Baltimore majority – 87 percent – of the subgroup lacked English proficity blocks where more than 15 percent of the residents were ciency. identified as Latinos in the 2000 Census. The results, they wrote, showed that “health competence” Surveyors looked at four different sections: the respon- was a construct that sheds light on latent characteristics that dents’ socio-demographic characteristics, personal health and either enable or act as barriers for the health-seeking behavhealth-seeking behavior, knowledge and experience with dia- ior that influences access to care for the foreign-born Latino betes and related quality of care, and patterns of access and population in Baltimore.
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