Medical apartheid' - Religious, community leaders accuse Healthcare giant of discrimination
Wednesday, December 22, 2004 at 04:36AM
TheSpook
The Windy City has a long history of housing and lending discrimination
alongside unspoken geographic boundaries carved out along racial lines,
but community activists and a research group have accused a major
non-profit medical institution of discrimination based on its sparse
investment into urban facilities that primarily treat Black and Latino
patients. According to "Separate and Unequal: Racial Redlining in
Investment at Advocate Hospitals," Chicago's largest healthcare
corporation invested almost 800 percent more, $232 million compared to
$26 million, in significant capital improvements at its four hospitals
serving predominately White patients than on its four hospitals serving
Blacks and Latinos. "First, our people confronted redlining in real
estate. Then, we had to take on discriminatory lending in banking. Now,
we are face-to-face with an apartheid-like system of healthcare
delivery," said Rev. Clarence Ray Kelley, pastor of Pathway Missionary
Baptist Church on the west side, and a leader of the Metropolitan
Alliance of Congregations. Rev. Kelley stood with Rev. Dr. Marshall
Hatch of New Mount Pilgrim Baptist Church, Rev. Dr. C.J. Wright of
Christ Lutheran Church, other religious and community leaders, a
congressman and Advocate employees Dec. 1 outside Advocate Bethany
Hospital to release the report. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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