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Just Health

Treating Structural Racism to Heal America

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2023

The author of the bestselling Just Medicine reveals how racial inequality undermines public health and how we can change it

With the rise of the Movement for Black Lives and the feverish calls for Medicare for All, the public spotlight on racial inequality and access to healthcare has never been brighter. The rise of COVID-19 and its disproportionate effects on people of color has especially made clear how the color of one's skin is directly related to the quality of care (or lack thereof) a person receives, and the disastrous health outcomes Americans suffer as a result of racism and an unjust healthcare system.
Timely and accessible, Just Health examines how deep structural racism embedded in the fabric of American society leads to worse health outcomes and lower life expectancy for people of color. By presenting evidence of discrimination in housing, education, employment, and the criminal justice system, Dayna Bowen Matthew shows how racial inequality pervades American society and the multitude of ways that this undermines the health of minority populations. The author provides a clear path forward for overcoming these massive barriers to health and ensuring that everyone has an equal opportunity to be healthy. She encourages health providers to take a leading role in the fight to dismantle the structural inequities their patients face.
A compelling and essential read, Just Health helps us to understand how racial inequality damages the health of our minority communities and explains what we can do to fight back.

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    • Library Journal

      December 10, 2021

      Through the lens of the life of her late father Vincent Edward Bowen Jr. (1930-79), leading public health and civil rights advocate Matthew (dean, George Washington Univ. Law Sch.; Just Medicine) testifies to what she identifies as the racist, state-sponsored political violence of structural inequality and injustice in the United States. The book's empirical evidence proves that systemic racism is embedded in the nation's enduring societal institutions and relegates non-white Americans to ill-health and truncated life expectancies. She traces such results to unequal access to quality health care (including prenatal and neonatal services), decent housing, effective education, and more. Matthew demonstrates that it's not only health risks and outcomes that are at stake in the unfair distribution of resources, as is grossly illustrated in structural income inequality that stratifies the United States into predetermined hierarchies. She warns that the top-heavy, white supremacist inequality that is foundational to deadly differences among the U.S. population is strangling the American dream and with it the nation itself. Marshall's expos� of health disparities will compel experts and general readers who are concerned about public health and the state of the nation generally to rally in a civil rights--era collaborative model of intervention at all levels to hold government accountable to dismantle discrimination. VERDICT A must-needed examination.--Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State Univ., Tempe

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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