Improving the health of the nation: HRSA's mission to achieve health equity.
نویسنده
چکیده
Mary Wakefield, PhD, RNa Improving the health status of the United States is predicated on reducing and eventually eliminating health disparities and achieving health equity. Meaningfully addressing health disparities is complex work and involves considering what are, at times, seemingly unrelated factors. Recognizing this challenge, the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) recently hosted an inter-professional summit titled Nursing in 3D: Workforce Diversity, Health Disparities, and Social Determinants of Health. The speakers included experts in nursing, health workforce, epidemiology, and public health who presented recent findings on complex connections among workforce diversity, health disparities, and social determinants of health. The interplay of these factors is not a new focus for HRSA; in fact, the basis for some of the meeting’s agenda was drawn from an earlier HRSA report titled “The Rationale for Diversity in the Health Professions: A Review of the Evidence.”1 The report shows that patients are best served by providers who are knowledgeable and conversant in the background and culture of the patients for whom they care. Through these and many other related efforts, HRSA has engaged a sharp focus on eliminating disparities in health outcomes and enhancing health equity across the populations served by our programs. An essential element in this effort is building a culturally and linguistically diverse health workforce by increasing both minority participation in the health professions and the cultural competency of all health professionals. Increased diversity among health professionals leads to improved patient satisfaction, patient-clinician communication, and access to care for racial/ethnic minority patients.2 Consequently, for many of HRSA’s health professions training grants, the agency requires grant applicants (generally health professions schools) to identify in their applications innovative programs and institutional strategies to effectively develop and retain a diverse and culturally competent workforce. Such strategies often include supporting activities to recruit diverse students and provide cultural competency training. During academic year 2011–2012, 46% of graduates and individuals who completed training and received direct financial support through one of HRSA’s Title VII or Title VIII programs were from underrepresented minority groups and/or disadvantaged backgrounds.3 HRSA is evaluating these strategies and incentives to identify and expand on
منابع مشابه
Improving the World’s Health through the Post-2015 Development Agenda: Perspectives from Rwanda
The world has made a great deal of progress through the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to improve the health and well-being of people around the globe, but there remains a long way to go. Here we provide reflections on Rwanda’s experience in working to meet the health-related targets of the MDGs. This experience has informed our proposal of five guiding principles that may be useful for co...
متن کاملImplementation Research: An Efficient and Effective Tool to Accelerate Universal Health Coverage
Success in the implementation of evidence-based interventions (EBIs) in different settings has had variable success. Implementation research offers the approach needed to understand the variability of health outcomes from implementation strategies in different settings and why interventions were successful in some countries and failed in others. When mastered and embedd...
متن کاملAchieving a “Grand Convergence” in Global Health by 2035: Rwanda Shows the Way; Comment on “Improving the World’s Health Through the Post-2015 Development Agenda: Perspectives From Rwanda”
Global Health 2035, the report of The Lancet Commission on Investing in Health, laid out a bold, highly ambitious framework for making rapid progress in improving global public health outcomes. It showed that with the right health investments, the international community could achieve a “grand convergence” in global health—a reduction in avertable infectious, maternal, and child deaths down to ...
متن کاملEquity in health from social determinants of health’s point of view
Health, as a public good, and equity in health, as a moral concept are considered as human right. Equity in health is defined as lack of systematic discrepancies in health or social determinants of health among different groups of a community. Social justice is considered as a matter of life and death. It is believe that inappropriate distribution of health services is one of the major determi...
متن کاملUniversal Pharmacare in Canada: A Prescription for Equity in Healthcare
Despite progressive universal drug coverage and pharmaceutical policies found in other countries, Canada remains the only developed nation with a publicly funded healthcare system that does not include universal coverage for prescription drugs. In the absence of a national pharmacare plan, a province may choose to cover a specific sub-population for certain drugs. Altho...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Public health reports
دوره 129 Suppl 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2014