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Code · BILL · 116th Congress · H.R. 6637 (Introduced in House) — To improve the health of minority individuals, and for other purposes. · Sec. 452

Sec. 452. Findings

270 words·~1 min read·/bill/116/hr/6637/ih/section-452

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Congress finds the following: Numerous studies and reports, including the 2015 National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the 2002 report of the Institute of Medicine entitled Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care , document the extensiveness to which health disparities exist across the country. These studies have found that, on average, racial and ethnic minorities are disproportionately afflicted with chronic and acute conditions—such as cancer, diabetes, musculoskeletal disease, obesity, and hypertension—and suffer worse health outcomes, worse health status, and higher mortality rates than their White counterparts.
Several recent studies also show that health disparities are a function of not only access to health care, but also the social determinants of health—including the environment, the physical structure of communities, nutrition and food options, educational attainment and health literacy, employment, race, ethnicity, immigration status, geography, and language preference—that directly and indirectly affect the health, health care, and wellness of individuals and communities. Integrally involving and fully supporting the communities most affected by health inequities in the assessment, planning, launch, and evaluation of health disparity elimination efforts are among the leading recommendations made to adequately address and ultimately reduce health disparities.
Recommendations also include supporting the efforts of community stakeholders from a broad cross section—including local businesses, local departments of commerce, education, labor, urban planning, and transportation, and community-based and other nonprofit organizations, including national and regional intermediaries with demonstrated capacity to serve low-income urban communities—to find areas of common ground around health disparity elimination and collaborate to improve the overall health and wellness of a community and its residents.
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