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- <text id=91TT2042>
- <title>
- Sep. 16, 1991: Why Do Blacks Die Young?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 16, 1991 Can This Man Save Our Schools?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 50
- Why Do Blacks Die Young?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The gap in life expectancy between the races in America remains
- wide. The search for the causes runs from poverty and prejudice
- to life-style.
- </p>
- <p>By Christine Gorman--Reported by Julie Johnson/Washington,
- Andrew Purvis/New York and Don Winbush/Atlanta
- </p>
- <p> The birth of a child is a time of joy and promise. In a
- land as rich as the U.S., all parents have the right to expect
- a life long and healthy for their sons and daughters. But the
- odds that this wish will come true are shockingly reduced if the
- baby happens to be black.
- </p>
- <p> A white baby stands a 70% better chance of reaching its
- fourth birthday than a black child. And the average life
- expectancy of African Americans is 70.3 years, much less than
- the 76 years that white Americans can expect.
- </p>
- <p> The life-spans of both races have lengthened over the
- decades, but the gap between white and black has remained
- stubbornly wide, and it increased sharply during the Reagan
- years, when many social programs that helped minorities were
- slashed. The gap has since begun to narrow, but it is just as
- large now as it was in 1982. This lack of progress has become
- one of the most studied issues of public health and one of the
- greatest challenges facing government policymakers. Why are
- blacks dying so much younger than whites?
- </p>
- <p> One cause is the crime and violence that plague many inner
- cities. Black boys between the ages of one and four are three
- times as likely as white toddlers to be the victims of homicide.
- Black teenagers are murdered six times as often as whites.
- </p>
- <p> But crime is only a small part of the story. Study after
- study shows that blacks are just not as healthy as whites or
- other racial groups--at any age. Black toddlers are three
- times as likely as white youngsters to die from meningitis,
- pneumonia or influenza. Black men are three times as likely to
- contract AIDS, and 50% more likely to die from a heart attack,
- even if they make it to a hospital. Death from stroke is five
- times as common in African Americans of both sexes between the
- ages of 35 and 55. Advanced kidney disease is 15 to 20 times as
- common.
- </p>
- <p> Better medical treatment and health education for African
- Americans could reduce the black-white mortality gap by an
- estimated 60%. "We have a whole segment of our population dying
- unnecessarily, and we're worried about whether to eat oat-bran
- or wheat-bran muffins," fumes Dr. David Ansell, director of
- ambulatory screening at Chicago's Cook County Hospital. "It's
- the medical equivalent of Marie Antoinette's saying `Let them
- eat cake.'"
- </p>
- <p> Much of the difference between black and white life-spans
- results from poverty and discrimination. But the problem is a
- maddening mosaic involving many other factors as well. New
- evidence suggests that part of the reason blacks suffer more
- from high blood pressure, for example, may lie in genetics. Many
- analysts have also cited lack of preventive care and cultural
- differences--such as a fattier diet and a higher rate of
- smoking among blacks. None of these factors, however, can be
- completely separated from the others.
- </p>
- <p> Poverty. One-third of African Americans live below the
- official poverty line (an income of $12,000 a year for a family
- of four), in contrast to 12% of whites. Although the Medicaid
- program offers free treatment to the poorest citizens, many
- low-income working people are not fully insured. Moreover, the
- everyday struggle to survive often takes precedence over health
- care. "For many people the question may be `Do I go to work
- today, or do I see the doctor?'" says Dr. Earl Scott, medical
- director of the Sydenham Clinic, part of a network of free
- clinics in Harlem.
- </p>
- <p> Perils of living in poverty also take their toll. The
- sharing of contaminated needles among drug users speeds the
- spread of AIDS. Alcoholism, stress and poor diet help fuel
- increases in cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer and liver
- failure. A study in Washington found that 50% of black men
- living in public housing suffer from hypertension, in contrast
- to 20% of all black men in the city. And 25% of the projects'
- women suffer from diabetes, against 7% in Washington as a whole.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, preaching about health care can seem
- laughable in crime-ridden inner cities. "We went door to door
- in half a dozen black neighborhoods in St. Louis looking for
- young men who had significant hypertension," says Dr. H.
- Mitchell Perry of Washington University. "These guys said,
- `Look, this is not my biggest problem.' They were wondering
- whether they would live to age 35."
- </p>
- <p> Lack of Preventive Care. Measles, syphilis and other
- infectious diseases staged deadly comebacks during the 1980s,
- hitting blacks particularly hard. Much of this increase can be
- tied to breakdowns in the public health system. In 1982, when
- the federal immunization program against measles was cut, health
- officials counted 1,700 cases nationally. Last year there were
- more than 27,000 cases--primarily in poor urban areas--with
- 89 deaths. In the early days of the AIDS epidemic, health
- officials cannibalized their syphilis programs, which had
- focused on the inner city, in order to combat the new threat.
- As a result, the incidence of syphilis among African Americans
- doubled between 1985 and 1989.
- </p>
- <p> The high rate of infant mortality (18 per 1,000 births for
- blacks, vs. 9.2 per 1,000 for whites) results in large part from
- the lack of prenatal care, which is perhaps the most
- cost-effective type of health care available. Each dollar spent
- on prenatal care saves between $3 and $20 in medical expenses
- in the infant's first year of life alone. And yet total
- government funding for prenatal care--on both the local and
- federal levels--fell throughout the 1980s.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, fewer blacks are seeing private physicians than
- ever before. In 1977, 3 out of 5 were covered by private health
- insurance. By 1987, the ratio had dropped to less than half.
- Black doctors tend to treat more black patients than do their
- white colleagues. Yet the number of black doctors declined from
- 26,000 in 1984 to 16,000 last year, largely because federal
- scholarship programs for medical students have been cut back.
- </p>
- <p> With nowhere else to go, many African Americans rely on
- the local emergency room for all their medical needs. "The
- emergency room may treat a patient's pneumonia, but it won't do
- a Pap smear or screen a woman for breast cancer," says Dr. Marc
- Rivo, director of the division of medicine at the Department of
- Health and Human Services. Without early detection, more than
- half of black women with breast cancer admitted to Harlem
- Hospital are already incurable, in contrast to 8% of whites at
- a nearby facility.
- </p>
- <p> Discrimination. For unknown reasons--prejudice may be
- the only explanation--many doctors and hospitals do not treat
- blacks' medical problems as seriously as those of whites. In one
- study, researchers found that, regardless of income, blacks are
- half as likely as whites to receive bypass operations for their
- heart problems. Another investigation revealed that among
- patients undergoing dialysis for kidney disease, whites are 33%
- more likely to get a kidney transplant. A third study showed
- that blacks who were hospitalized for pneumonia received
- less-intensive treatment than whites.
- </p>
- <p> No doubt anticipating inferior care, many blacks avoid
- doctors and hospitals altogether. Black women report a prevalent
- attitude among gynecologists that anything wrong might be the
- patient's own fault. "Back a few years ago, I was having
- excruciating abdominal pain, and I wound up at a hospital in my
- area," says Alicia Georges, who lives in the Bronx and is a
- professor of nursing at Lehman College. "The first thing they
- began to ask me was how many sexual partners I'd had. I was
- married and owned my own house. But immediately, in looking at
- me, they said, `Oh, she just has pelvic inflammatory disease.'"
- </p>
- <p> Life-Style. Louis Sullivan, Secretary of Health and Human
- Services and the highest-ranking black in the Bush
- Administration, warns African Americans not to exaggerate the
- effects of poverty and bias on their health. Says he: "The top
- 10 causes of premature death in our nation are significantly
- influenced by personal behavior and life-style choices."
- Sullivan has exhorted blacks to quit smoking, cut down on
- drinking and lose weight. Such personal initiative, he claims,
- "could eliminate up to 45% of deaths from cardiovascular
- disease, 23% of deaths from cancer and more than 50% of the
- disabling complications of diabetes."
- </p>
- <p> The evidence tends to back him up. A half-century ago,
- blacks developed cancer less often than whites. Now, in large
- part because of smoking, the mortality rate for malignancies is
- 25% greater for blacks than it is for whites. Almost half of
- black women and one-third of black men are severely overweight,
- vs. one-fourth of white men and women. In addition, the salt in
- soul food can aggravate high blood pressure. "We have to teach
- people that diet is important," says Dr. Harold Freeman, a
- surgeon at Harlem Hospital. "As the saying goes, if you can
- control your mouth, you can control your life."
- </p>
- <p> Genetics. In a study of 50 black and 219 white physicians,
- who presumably have access to care and can make improvements in
- their diet, researchers found a marked difference in the
- ability to handle cholesterol. Compared with their white
- colleagues, the black physicians exhibited higher blood levels
- of a type of lipoprotein believed to aggravate blockage of
- coronary arteries. Other research found that elderly black men
- are twice as likely to develop tuberculosis as white men living
- under the same socioeconomic conditions. Perhaps, scientists
- speculated, genetic differences affected the body's ability to
- knock out the bacteria.
- </p>
- <p> More controversial has been the search for a hereditary
- factor underlying hypertension. Stress and diet are known to
- affect high blood pressure. Racism may also play a role. But
- "there is so much excess hypertension in blacks that it's
- inconceivable to me that these factors alone are the ones that
- balance the equation upward," says Dr. Elijah Saunders, a
- cardiologist at the University of Maryland Medical System. Some
- researchers have even suggested that African Americans have
- inherited a greater sensitivity to salt. But any explanation
- along genetic lines will have to account for the fact that
- modern-day Africans do not appear to be particularly susceptible
- to high blood pressure.
- </p>
- <p> However important it may be, genetics is not destiny. Nor
- is poverty, culture or racism insurmountable. In fact, a number
- of developing countries, working with meager budgets over the
- past 20 years, have surpassed many parts of the U.S. in health
- care. A man living in Bangladesh, one of the poorest nations,
- has a better chance of reaching age 65 than a man in Harlem.
- </p>
- <p> Given the limited amount of government aid for preventive
- medicine, a few American communities have started up their own
- public-health-education programs. One of the most promising is
- in the Mississippi Delta counties of Humphreys and Leflore,
- where nearly half the primarily black population lives under the
- national poverty line. Three years ago, the Freedom from Hunger
- Foundation joined two state agencies to create the Partners for
- Improved Nutrition and Health. The program enlists volunteers,
- such as Bertha Thurman, to serve as health advisers in their
- communities. After completing a 10-week training course, Thurman
- has become a crucial bridge to the medical system. "We get
- called on to do everything from provide an aspirin to pay the
- utility bill," she says. "And we reinforce what the local health
- department has already mentioned to people."
- </p>
- <p> This kind of self-help program is only a beginning.
- Secretary Sullivan's emphasis on individual responsibility is
- only a beginning. After decades of nothing but beginnings,
- governments at all levels need to put more effort into bridging
- the gap between black and white health.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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