美国艾滋病毒/艾滋病和医疗保健中的种族差异:来自阿拉巴马州黑带社会学实地研究的证据。

Andrew A Zekeri
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摘要

本文采用探索性质的研究方法,考察了非裔美国人对种族艾滋病毒/艾滋病和健康差异相关的心理社会因素的看法。这项研究是为了确定非裔美国人如何定义他们的健康和疾病负担,他们的困境的原因;他们面临的问题;他们在提供住房、交通和医疗等日常必需品方面的应对策略。如果我们忽视非裔美国人的声音,我们就使他们失去人性,使他们的人性被忽视。没有听到非裔美国人的声音,我们对他们的社会生活和健康问题的理解是不完整的。从上到下的分析错过了只有那些经历过种族健康差异的人才能表达的见解。他们的声音对有意消除种族健康差异和促进健康公平的政策制定者具有重要意义。论文中的焦点小组讨论提供了非洲裔美国人的声音、存在和观点,他们生活在边缘,通常被我们其他人所忽视。围绕种族健康差异的问题是复杂、困难和有争议的。结果表明,健康保险、缺乏获得高质量医疗保健的机会、社区环境危害、贫困、缺乏医生、不健康的饮食习惯、不良的生活方式选择、缺乏非裔美国人从事医疗保健专业、缺乏对白人医疗保健专业人员的信任和失业是造成美国种族健康差异的主要原因。医疗保健是权力分配和社会组织的副产品。
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Racial-Ethnic Disparities in HIV/AIDS and Health Care in the United States: Evidence from a Sociological Field Research in Alabama's Black Belt.

This paper examines African Americans' beliefs of psychosocial factors associated with racial HIV/AIDS and health disparities using an exploratory qualitative study. This research was conducted to determine how African Americans define their health and disease burden, the reasons for their plight; the problems they face; their coping strategies for providing daily necessities of shelter, transportation, and health care. If we ignore the voices of African Americans, we have dehumanized them, making their humanity invisible. Without hearing the voices of African Americans, our understanding of their social life and health issues is incomplete. Analyses from the top down miss the insights that only those experiencing racial health disparities can articulate. Their voices have important implications for policymakers interested in eliminating racial health disparities and promote equity in health. The focus groups discussions in the paper provide the voice, the presence, and the perspective of African Americans who live on the margins and are generally invisible to the rest of us. Issues surrounding racial health disparities are complex, difficult, and controversial. Results indicate that health insurance, lack of access to quality health care, environmental hazards in neighborhoods, poverty, lack of medical practitioners, unhealthy eating habits, poor life style choices, lack of African Americans in health care professions, lack of trust in white health care professionals and unemployment contribute substantially to racial health disparities in America. Health care is a by-product of the distribution of power and the organization of the society.

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