PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

JAMA Viewpoint: Young African-American men deserve better from health care

2015-03-09
(Press-News.org) BOSTON, MA - Healthcare spending is at an all-time high in the U.S., yet young African-American men see little benefit, according to Boston Medical Center (BMC) researchers' Viewpoint commentary published in the current issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

The researchers note that black men have a life expectancy nearly five years less than white men. While heart disease and cancer contribute to this decreased life expectancy, homicide also plays a large role. From ages 1 to 14, homicide is either the second or third leading cause of death for African-American men, and from ages 15 to 34, it is the leading cause of death. A frightening fact cited by researchers: Black men are safer in prison. Data shows that black men are half as likely to die if they are in prison than if they aren't incarcerated, whereas white men can die at a higher rate if they are incarcerated.

There have been calls from the public health sector to address the health of young African-American men, but the medical field has been relatively quiet, according to corresponding author Stephen Martin, MD, EdM, of the department of family medicine at BMC and the Boston University School of Medicine.

"Boston Medical Center has many programs and partnerships designed to help individuals cope with violence, find meaningful supports, and make improvements toward living a longer, healthier and happier life. A clear example is providing prescriptions for the hospital's Preventive Food Pantry," Martin said. "But largely, we in the medical field are not meeting young African-American men where they are to address their medical needs - cardiovascular disease, diabetes management, HIV, mental health and much more."

The authors call for improved funding and other support for social and public health programs to address the disparities in healthcare, particularly as they impact young African-American men. Effectively addressing social determinants of health - conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work and age - has the greatest impact on health disparities and requires interventions beyond just medical care, Martin said. The authors also point out that U.S. public health programs and activities receive only three cents of the healthcare dollar to support efforts to improve the health and wellbeing of our most vulnerable populations. A breakdown of the U.S. healthcare dollar in calendar year 2013, the most recent year for which statistics are available, can be found here.

For medical care itself to improve, they call for proactive engagement and partnerships, effective lifestyle support such as the YMCA's Diabetes Prevention Programs, creating trusted spaces for men to feel comfortable and safe, and the use of newer technologies such as texting and virtual care team members to communicate with patients.

Martin and his colleagues also stressed the importance of programs such as the National Healthy Start Association, which bases its fatherhood programs on first addressing survival needs to ensure family involvement. Over the years, Healthy Start has developed programs that involve fathers, helping them to have bigger roles in their children's lives and promote the importance of responsible fatherhood, thereby adding value and strengthening family resilience.

"There is still much to be done to meet men on their own terms and provide them with the survival, behavioral, and medical care they need," said Brian Jack, MD, chair of the department of family medicine at Boston Medical Center and Boston University School of Medicine. "Traditional medical care generally isn't built to do this well. But we are learning better approaches and ways to join efforts with others to truly and effectively meet the needs of young African-American men."

"There are many shadows that young African-American men in this country walk with every day of their lives; shadows that impede their ability to access a myriad of needed services," said co-author Kenn Harris, president-elect of the National Healthy Start Association. "Indeed we need services that meet them where they are, but this calls for us to understand the communities in which they live. Our male involvement/fatherhood programs build off of the community-driven approaches demonstrated in the federal Healthy Start programs, which have proven to be an effective strategy. As providers begin to move out of their systems to engage community partners, there's greater potential for the needs of young African American men to be met."

INFORMATION:

Co-authors include Stephen Martin, MD, EdM, of the department of family medicine at Boston Medical Center and Boston University School of Medicine; Brian Jack, MD, chair of the department of family medicine at Boston Medical Center and Boston University School of Medicine; and Kenn Harris of New Haven (Conn.) Healthy Start, The Community Foundation for Greater New Haven, and President-Elect, National Healthy Start Association.

About Boston Medical Center Boston Medical Center is a private, not-for-profit, 482-bed, academic medical center that is the primary teaching affiliate of Boston University School of Medicine. It is the largest and busiest provider of trauma and emergency services in New England. Committed to providing high-quality health care to all, the hospital offers a full spectrum of pediatric and adult care services including primary and family medicine and advanced specialty care with an emphasis on community-based care. Boston Medical Center offers specialized care for complex health problems and is a leading research institution, receiving more than $118 million in sponsored research funding in fiscal year 2014. It is the 11th largest recipient of funding in the U.S. from the National Institutes of Health among independent hospitals. In 1997, BMC founded Boston Medical Center Health Plan, Inc., now one of the top ranked Medicaid MCOs in the country, as a non-profit managed care organization. It does business in Massachusetts as BMC HealthNet Plan and as Well Sense Health Plan in New Hampshire, serving more than 315,000 people, collectively. Boston Medical Center and Boston University School of Medicine are partners in the Boston HealthNet - 14 community health centers focused on providing exceptional health care to residents of Boston. For more information, please visit http://www.bmc.org.

About New Haven Healthy Start New Haven Healthy Start (NHHS) is one of 105 federally funded urban maternal and child health initiatives addressing infant mortality across the United States serving more than 633,000 families. NHHS has served more than 16,000 participants and over 8,000 infants since inception in 1997. NHHS is community-based and serves the most vulnerable in New Haven - poor women, infants, children and low-income fathers - that deal with tremendous challenges around economic stability, health, and social disparities; struggling daily to meet their basic needs. NHHS provides care coordination, outreach, education and training as well as community support to all populations in New Haven but targets African-American women, particularly those that are pregnant and/or parenting. NHHS is housed at The Community Foundation for Greater New Haven, a philanthropic institution that was established in 1928 as the community's permanent charitable endowment. NHHS is implementing the National Healthy Start Association (membership organization for the 105 sites), Dads Matter Initiative's CAM© (Core Adaptive Model) for male involvement and fatherhood programs and building community partnership through The Men's Consortium. For more information, please visit http://www.nhhealthystart.org; http://www.nationalhealthystart.org; and http://www.cfgnh.org.

BMC Contact: Ellen Slingsby, ellen.slingsby@bmc.org, 617-638-8489

Healthy Start Contact: Katharine Spadacenta, kspadacenta@cfgnh.org, 203-777-7066



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

T cell population altered in patients with type 2 diabetes and/or obesity

2015-03-09
As obesity rates rise, so does the incidence of type 2 diabetes (T2D). In obese individuals and those with obesity-induced T2D, there is an accumulation of immune cells within adipose tissue that results in a low level of chronic inflammation. Gut microbial populations are also altered in these individuals. Weight loss, either through diet or gastric bypass, improves TD2-associated symptoms and shifts the gut microbiota. A new study in the Journal of Clinical Investigation reports that a population of T cells known as mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells is altered ...

Psychedelic drug use could reduce psychological distress, suicidal thinking

2015-03-09
Fast Facts: U.S. adults with a history of using some nonaddictive psychedelic drugs had reduced likelihood of psychological distress and suicidal thoughts, plans, and attempts, according to data from a nationwide survey. While these psychedelic drugs are illegal, a Johns Hopkins researcher and study author recommends reconsidering their status, as they may be useful in treating depression. Some people have serious adverse reactions to these drugs, which may not stand out in the survey data because they are less numerous than positive outcomes. A history of ...

Tiny nanoparticles could make big impact for patients in need of cornea transplant

2015-03-09
Fast Facts: Medicine-loaded nanoparticles show promise for humans needing corneal transplants. Tiny nanoparticles may be solution for medicine compliance. Animal study gives patients, family members and clinicians hope for more easily managing medicine after eye surgery. There are about 48,000 corneal transplants done each year in the U.S., compared to approximately 16,000 kidney transplants and 2,100 heart transplants [1] [2]. Out of the 48,000 corneal transplants done, 10 percent of them end up in rejection, largely due to poor medication compliance. This ...

Centuries-old DNA helps identify origins of slave skeletons found in Caribbean

2015-03-09
More than 300 years ago, three African-born slaves died on the Caribbean island of Saint Martin. No written records memorialized their fate, and their names and precise ethnic background remained a mystery. For centuries, their skeletons were subjected to the hot, wet weather of the tropical island until they were unearthed in 2010 during a construction project in the Zoutsteeg area of the capital city of Philipsburg. Now researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and the University of Copenhagen have extracted and sequenced tiny bits of DNA remaining ...

One step closer to artificial photosynthesis and 'solar fuels'

2015-03-09
Caltech scientists, inspired by a chemical process found in leaves, have developed an electrically conductive film that could help pave the way for devices capable of harnessing sunlight to split water into hydrogen fuel. When applied to semiconducting materials such as silicon, the nickel oxide film prevents rust buildup and facilitates an important chemical process in the solar-driven production of fuels such as methane or hydrogen. "We have developed a new type of protective coating that enables a key process in the solar-driven production of fuels to be performed ...

Assumptions of equality lead to poorer group decisions

2015-03-09
People of differing competence tend to give each other's views equal weight, preventing them from making the best group decisions, finds new UCL-led research. This suggests that people with similar levels of competence make the best decision-making groups, as otherwise the tendency to assume equal competence can give undue weight to the opinions of less capable members. The new study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, investigated how pairs of people with differing competence weighted their own judgements against each other's. Researchers ...

Progeny of old parents have fewer offspring

Progeny of old parents have fewer offspring
2015-03-09
This news release is available in German. Reproduction at old age involves risks that may impact one's own life and may impose reduced biological fitness on the offspring. Such evidence, previously obtained in humans and other taxa under laboratory conditions, has now been confirmed by researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Seewiesen together with colleagues from the UK and New Zealand for the first time in free-living animals. In a long-term study on a population of house sparrows they found that offspring of older parents themselves produced ...

Tiny minority of Chinese adults enjoy ideal heart health

2015-03-09
Nearly three out of four Chinese adults have poor cardiovascular health, with poor diet and growing rates of obesity compounding the risks associated with continuing high rates of smoking, according to a new survey published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. The 2010 China Noncommunicable Disease Surveillance Group collected cardiovascular health data from a nationally representative sample of more than 96,000 men and women in the general Chinese population. According to estimates derived from the survey results, just 0.2 percent of Chinese men and ...

Cooperative communities emerge in transparent social networks

2015-03-09
People in a society are bound together by a set of connections - a social network. Cooperation between people in the network is essential for societies to prosper, and the question of what drives the emergence and sustainability of cooperation is a fundamental one. What we know about other people in a network informs how much we are willing to cooperate with them. By conducting a series of online experiments, researchers explored how two key areas of network knowledge effect cooperation in decision-making: what we know about the reputation and social connections of those ...

CO2 increase can intensify future droughts in tropics, study suggests

2015-03-09
A new study suggests that increases in atmospheric CO2 could intensify extreme droughts in tropical and subtropical regions -- such as Australia, the southwest and central United States, and southern Amazonia -- at much a faster rate than previously anticipated, explains University of Texas at Austin professor Rong Fu in a commentary in the March 9 edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Fu, a professor at the university's Jackson School of Geosciences, writes about a new study by William K.M. Lau of the University of Maryland and Kyu-Myong Kim of the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How a broken bone from arm wrestling led to a paradigm shift in mental health: Exercise as a first-line treatment for depression

Alarming levels of microplastics discovered in human brain tissue, linked to dementia

Global neurology leader makes The Neuro world's first open science institute

Alpha particle therapy emerges as a potent weapon against neuroendocrine tumours

Neuroscience beyond boundaries: Dr. Melissa Perreault bridges Indigenous knowledge and brain science

Giant clone of seaweed in the Baltic Sea

Motion capture: In world 1st, M. mobile’s motility apparatus clarified

One-third of older Canadians at nutritional risk, study finds

Enhancing climate action: satellite insights into fossil fuel CO2 emissions

Operating a virtual teaching and research section as an open source community: Practice and experience

Lack of medical oxygen affects millions

Business School celebrates triple crown

Can Rhizobium + low P increase the yield of common bean in Ethiopia?

Research Security Symposium on March 12

Special type of fat tissue could promote healthful longevity and help maintain exercise capacity in aging

Researchers develop high-water-soluble pyrene tetraone derivative to boost energy density of aqueous organic flow batteries

Who gets the lion’s share? HKU ecologists highlight disparities in global biodiversity conservation funding

HKU researchers unveil neuromorphic exposure control system to improve machine vision in extreme lighting environments

Researchers develop highly robust, reconfigurable, and mechanochromic cellulose photonic hydrogels

Researchers develop new in-cell ultraviolet photodissociation top-down mass spectrometry method

Researchers develop innovative tool for rapid pathogen detection

New insights into how cancer evades the immune system

3 Ways to reduce child sexual abuse rates

A third of children worldwide forecast to be obese or overweight by 2050

Contraction inhibitors after 30 weeks have no effect on baby's health

Nearly 1 in 5 US college athletes reports abusive supervision by their coaches

THE LANCET: More than half of adults and a third of children and adolescents predicted to have overweight or obesity by 2050

Ideal nitrogen fertilizer rates in Corn Belt have been climbing for decades, Iowa State study shows

Survey suggests people with disabilities may feel disrespected by health care providers

U-Michigan, UC Riverside launch alliance to promote hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engines

[Press-News.org] JAMA Viewpoint: Young African-American men deserve better from health care