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Saturday
Jan152005
Saturday, January 15, 2005 at 01:35AM
Despite years of attention to the issue, the racial gap in Americans'
health continues, with only a few success stories, federal health
officials said yesterday. African Americans die from nearly every major
disease or cause at rates higher than white people, especially homicide
and HIV, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Blacks also have higher rates of stroke, high blood pressure and many
infectious diseases, especially sexually transmitted diseases, the CDC
said in its weekly report on disease, which this week focused on
black-white health disparities. Officials said more culturally
sensitive programs targeted at blacks should be implemented to improve
the picture. "We've been talking about the problem, but we haven't done
enough in terms of resources and making sure interventions known to be
effective are used widely in both populations," said Dr. Ben Truman,
associate director of science in the CDC's Office of Minority Health.
Higher rates of measles among blacks in the 1970s were erased after
vaccination programs focused on inner cities, Truman said. Efforts to
curb heart disease and breast cancer have helped lower rates of those
diseases in both blacks and whites, but the racial gap persists, he
said. Truman said screening for colon and prostate cancer, which are
both more lethal among blacks, should be made widely available to
everyone, especially African Americans, to diminish rates of those
diseases. [more]