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Targeting health disparities: a model linking upstream determinants to downstream interventions.

Health affairs (Project Hope), Vol. 27, No. 2. (r 2008), pp. 339-349.

X Abstract

Certain social/environmental factors put some groups at extraordinary risk for adverse health outcomes, creating health disparities. We present a downward causal model, originating at the population level and ending at disease, with psychological and behavioral responses linking the two. This approach identifies how specific social environments "get under the skin" to cause disease, illustrated with the disparity in mortality from aggressive premenopausal breast cancer suffered by black women. Broadening our lens to consider the entire chain of causal factors, spanning multiple levels and interacting across the life span, heightens our ability to craft specific interventions to address group differences in health.

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This article has been bookmarked 8 times, initially on 2008-08-18.

2009-07-23 User zchen75
2009-06-19 Group Med Anthro @ UF
User cgravlee
2009-05-05 Group Integrative Expertise for Global Health
User jago
2009-02-01 User Zephyrus
2008-10-13 User mpgrayer , 1 note

Proposes a theoretical model causally linking ecological and area conditions downwards through scales all the way to biomedical processes. Also investigates the different levels at which interventions can occur and the effects may they have downstream.

``Although a host of hereditary and individual behavioral factors are linked to health outcomes, we now understand that social circumstances and environmental factors place minority groups at a distinct disadvantage in health and disease.'' (p.340)

2008-10-13 21:28:56
2008-08-18 User plm
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