1 / 73

Latino Health Disparities: A Cultural Paradox?

Latino Health Disparities: A Cultural Paradox?. Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable, M.D. Professor of Medicine Division of General Internal Medicine Department of Medicine, UCSF October 27, 2005. Disparities and Differences.

Télécharger la présentation

Latino Health Disparities: A Cultural Paradox?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Latino Health Disparities: A Cultural Paradox? Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable, M.D. Professor of Medicine Division of General Internal Medicine Department of Medicine, UCSF October 27, 2005

  2. Disparities and Differences • Disparities implies a difference that demonstrates a disadvantage for a group that has been traditionally disenfranchised • Some differences may not be classified as disparities–White men have more CAD • Disadvantaged groups may have better outcomes for leading causes of death–Latinos and Asians

  3. Race or Ethnicity? • Racial categories fit geographic origins of humans • Ethnicity refers to self-identity with a national origin or cultural group • Admixture may confound categories • Census uses racial categories and subgroups and Hispanic ethnicity • Self identification = gold standard

  4. Social Class and Race/Ethnicity • Race has been a substitute for defining social class in the U.S. • Gradient of health outcomes at all SES levels comparing Blacks and Whites • Education and income are insufficient measuresof social class • Measures of wealth • Generation of social class • Community measures for segregation, safety, inequality, acculturation…

  5. TB Rate Ratio by EthnicityDemographics and SES

  6. Demographic Changes • 35% of persons in the US did not identify as White in the 2000 census • Immigrant tsunami of the the 20th century may be waning, but… • Spanish is an important language • Birth rates are highest for non-Whites––population growth • California is a minority majority state

  7. Chaos

  8. Latino Ethnicity • Admixture of major racial categories in Latino America for 500 years– European, Indigenous, and African • Ethnicity refers to self-identity with a group––diversity in US • National background, cultural identity • Genetic component

  9. Our History • Americas had 75 million inhabitants in 1500 • By 1600, over 50% were dead • Victims of disease, forced labor, war, …. • The greatest genocide known in history

  10. Race and Genetics • More genetic variance within than between racial groups–no genetic basis for race • Race/ethnicity identifies group more likely to share specific alleles • Random coupling will eliminate race––ever? • Interaction with environment–gene expression • Ancestral Informative Markers

  11. 21% of SNPs are racially specific 25% of SNPs are Pan Racial 3,899 SNPs in 313 genes in 4 U.S. racial groups Common to: # SNPs Stephens, et al Science 2001

  12. 100% 3.0% 90% 15% 80% 70% 52% 24% African 60% Native American 50% European 40% 30% 61% 45% 20% 10% 0% Mexican Puerto Rican American Genetic Origins of Latinos Percent Ancestral Contribution Admixture

  13. Latinos in the U.S. • More similarities than differences • Central role of Spanish language • Cultural themes unify • Racial admixture–500 years • Common cultural heritage: • Catholics, Spain, Indigenous

  14. Definition of Epidemiologic Paradox • Outcomes are better than expected based on the known or standard predictive risk factors • Low SES does not always translate to worse outcomes

  15. % LBW Rates by Ethnicity Fuentes-Afflick E and Lurie P, Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 1997

  16. Death Rate by Ethnicity, US 2000 W B L A/PI Heart Disease 130 191 89 72 Stroke 25 44 20 24 Diabetes 12 29 19 9 • Age-adjusted per 100,000 NCHS

  17. Latinos % Heart Disease 23.9 Cancer 19.7 Injury 8.4 Stroke 5.7 Diabetes 5.0 Homicide 2.9 Liver Disease 2.9 Whites % Heart Disease 29.7 Cancer 23.3 Stroke 6.8 COPD+ 5.6 Injury 3.9 Flu/pneumonia 2.6 Diabetes 2.6 Causes of Death, US 2001

  18. NHANES Self-Reported Rates of CV Outcomes 1999-2000

  19. Average Annual Rates per Million 50 40.9 40.75 40 30 15 20 11.3 10 0 Mexican White African Puerto Rican American U.S. Asthma Mortality 1990-1995 Homa et al. 2000

  20. Adverse Demographic Profile for Latinos • Less household income on average • About 30% live in poverty and have less wealth at every level of income • Fewer average years of education and proportion of college graduates • Fewer than half of Latinos 25 years or older completed high school compared with 77% of Whites • More single-parent households

  21. Proportions (Premature Mortality) Determinants of Health Social15% • Genetic • Behavioral • Environmental • Social Setting • Health care Genetic 30% Environment5% Health care 10% Behavior 40% Source: McGinnis JM, Russo PG, Knickman, JR. Health Affairs, April 2002.

  22. Adverse Social and Access Factors • Lower functional health literacy • Limited English proficiency–25% • Lowest health insurance coverage– 40% between 18-64 y are uninsured • Mexicans have the lowest insurance coverage of any national origin group • Less access to primary care MD • Twice as likely to report using ER as primary source of care

  23. Access to Markets with Healthy Foods for Diabetics in New York • Food targets: Fruit, vegetables, 1% fat milk, diet drinks, high fiber bread • 173 stores in East Harlem and 152 stores in Upper East Side • Had all 5 categories: 9% vs. 48% • More likely to live on a block with no store selling foods in E Harlem–50% vs. 24% • Example of disparities in environmental justice issues complicating behavior AJPH 2004; 94: 1549-54

  24. Diabetes, Hypertension and Cigarette Smoking Do these risk factors or conditions explain the paradox?

  25. Diabetes Prevalence in Latinos • NHANES III: 20% Mexican Americans vs. 11% Whites have DM • Increase of 20% to 35% in 15 years • Undiagnosed diabetes 4% • Up to half of Latinos unaware of DM • 95% of diabetes is type 2 • Prevalence in Puerto Ricans similar

  26. Disparities in Diabetes Treatment and Outcomes • CDC report--compared to Whites, Latinos were less likely to have: • Dilated eye exam(56% vs. 60%) • Foot exam (47% vs. 56%) • A1C test (18% vs. 27%) • Latinos have more LE amputations • Mexican Am have more retinopathy • More proteinuria and ESRD

  27. Hispanic HANES, 1982-1984:Hypertension Prevalence Men Women Mexican Am 23% 20% Puerto Rican 20% 18% Cuban American 21% 14% =

  28. NHANES III Hypertension Rate Men Women Total Mexican Am 23% 22% 23% African Am 34% 31% 32% White 25% 21% 23% Burt Hypertension 1995; 25:305

  29. NHANES Hypertension Rate Men Women Total Mex Am 88-94 23% 22% 23% 99-00 27% 30% 29% White 88-94 25% 21% 23% 99-00 28% 29% 29%

  30. Hypertension Control in Latinos - Have We Made Any Progress? • HHANES 1982-84 20% controlled at <140/90 • HHANES 1988-1992 24% controlled • San Antonio and Laredo Fewer aware, treated and controlled • South Bronx 23% Puerto Ricans controlled • Less knowledge about CAD prevention

  31. Hypertension Awareness and Control, 1999-2000 • Awareness: 58% Mex Am vs. 68% Whites • Only 50% of Mex Am men were aware • Similar awareness among women • Treatment rates lower: 39% vs. 59% • Control among those treated: 40% vs. 54% • Only 33% of Mex Am men at goal • +60 y more aware, treated, less control • Slow improvements in 1990s

  32. Behavioral Factors • Less cigarette smoking • More alcohol consumed - men • Nutritional habits less healthy • Less physical activity - women • More violence - DV plus • Less adherence to medications

  33. Cigarette Smoking in the U.S. – 2002National Health Interview Survey

  34. Biochemical Smokers in Mexican American Latinos • Underreporting occurred in up to 25% of Mexican American smokers • Former smokers misclassified - 11% • Never smokers misclassified in 4% • 12.1% of smokers had non-smoker cotinine levels • Cotinine measure may be better

  35. Ethnic Differences in Serum Cotinine Levels: NHANES 3 > 1 5 ng /ml ≤ 1 5 ng /ml p e r c e n t p e r c e n t A f r ic an A ms s m o k e r 9 6 4 non - s m o k e r 2 9 8 W hi t e s s m o k e r 9 4 6 non - s m o k e r 2 9 8 M e x ic an A ms s m o k e r 7 2 2 8 non - s m o k e r 1 9 9 J A MA 19 9 8;28 0 :13 5 -13 9

  36. Nicotine Metabolism in Blacks, Whites, Chinese and Latinos • Metabolic clearance of nicotine & cotinine in Latinos was similar to Whites, higher among Blacks and lower among Chinese • Intake of nicotine(mg) per cigarette: • Chinese: 0.73 • Latinos: 1.05 • Whites 1.10 • Blacks 1.41 • Nicotine intake = tobacco smoke

  37. Latino Paradox in CV Disease? • Prevalence of smoking is lower • Hypertension and lipids similar • Obesity more common • Physical inactivity more common • Less BP & DM awareness and control • Diabetes rate is 2-4 times • Lower SES by income, education • Fewer heart attacks • Fewer procedures to treat CAD

  38. CHD Prediction Scores By EthnicityColor in Framingham? • Applied sex specific CHD functions to 6 ethnically diverse cohorts • White and Black men and women prediction of CHD events works well • Japanese & Latino men and American Indian men & women–risk is overestimated • Adjust for different rates of risk factors and underlying rate of CHD • JAMA 2001; 286:180-7

  39. Is culture a protective factor? • Lower heart disease mortality rates despite higher or similar prevalence of cardiovascular risk • Unidentified factors that are protective against chronic diseases • More social support through community or social networks? • Genetic factors?

  40. Proposed Explanations of Paradox • Healthy immigrant effect • Salmon hypothesis–return to die at home and deaths not recorded • Misclassification of ethnicity in diagnosis and deaths––Latinos misclassified as Whites • Census undercounts (increase)

  41. What About Acculturation?

  42. Role of Acculturation? • NHANES III: Mexican Americans born in the US and speaking Spanish have higher adjusted SBP than English speaking counter parts - 123.9 vs. 121.5 mm Hg • US born Spanish speaking was significant in logistic regression models for men and women for SBP, BMI and current smoking • Bicultural Latinos at highest risk? Sundquist, AJPH 1999; 89:723

  43. Are Latina Women at Higher Risk? • Women 25 to 64 years showed adjusted SBP higher for Mexican Americans in HANES III • SBP was intermediate between Whites and African Americans • Not observed for women 18 to 24 years of any ethnic group

  44. Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging: Cohort Study Study Population • 1,789 Latinos aged 60+, Mexican ancestry (85%) • Mean age at baseline: 71 (60-101); 58% women • 51% born in Mexico or another Latin American country and were Spanish speaking • Baseline: 1998-99 & 4 –year follow up In home clinical evaluations and interview • Cultural orientation assessed by the Cuellar scale • language, contact with own ethnic group vs. others, celebration of traditions (0-30 pts) higher score higher Anglo orientation • Cognition (3MS) Haan, M, SCAIA (2005)

  45. Anglo cultural orientation Protective of Cognitive Decline Incidence of Alzheimer’s Disease was 15.4% in Mexican born and 12.4% in US born • Hazard of cognitive decline per point on cultural scale HR=0.98 95% CI (0.96-0.99) • 1 point increase means higher Anglo cultural orientation • Adjusted for age and gender, baseline diabetes and stroke

  46. Risk of dementia associated with combined income and education in study participants Adjusted for age, type 2 diabetes, stroke, gender, cultural orientation

  47. Cancer

  48. Cancer Incidence by Site and Ethnicity in Men, U.S. 2000(per 100,000 age-adjusted)

More Related