Cultural Effectiveness and Health Disparities Resources
APHA Health Disparities Database
The American Public Health Association has
developed a database which contains projects and interventions
provided by members of the public health community. The database
allows you to search for projects and interventions to health
disparity challenges in your communities.
Commission to End Health Care Disparities
Chaired by the American Medical Association, in conjunction
with the National Medical Association, the Commission focuses on Physician leadership, quality, and system approaches to the elimination of health care disparities.
Culturally
Effective Pediatric Care
This AAP web page provides general information about culturally
effective pediatric care and specific information, such as related
Academy Policy Statements and projects supported by the Academy.
Children's
Rights Curriculum
The Children's Rights Curriculum can be used to raise awareness
of the relationship
between public policy and the health rights of children, and encourage
a commitment to the development of an advocacy role related to
children's rights.
Community-based Resident Projects Tool Kit Chapter 5
The Community-based Resident Projects Toolkit is a guide developed to assist Residents in partnering with communities to improve child health.
Community Pediatrics Curriculum Manual Chapter 2
The Community Pediatrics Curriculum Manual is a resource for training pediatric residents in eight core competency areas of community.
Cross Cultural
Health Care Program
The
mission of the Cross Cultural Health Care Program is to serve
as a bridge between communities and health care institutions to
ensure full access to quality health care that is culturally and
linguistically appropriate.
Culturally
Effective Care in the Medical Home
The National Center of Medical Home Initiatives for Children
with Special Needs, housed with the Academy, has developed a web
site of resources for engaging in compassionate and culturally
effective care for children and families.
Diversity
Rx
Diversity Rx is a clearinghouse of information on how to meet
the language and cultural needs of minorities, immigrants, refugees
and other diverse populations seeking health care.
Healthy
People 2010
Healthy People 2010 is a set of health objectives for the Nation
to achieve over the first decade of the new century. The first goal
is to help individuals of all ages increase
life expectancy and improve their quality of life. The second
goal is to eliminate health disparities
among different segments of the population.
National
Center for Cultural Competence (NCCC)
The mission of the NCCC is to assist health and mental health
care systems to design, implement and evaluate culturally and
linguistically competent service delivery systems.
Office of Minority
Health Resource Center (OMHRC)
The Office of Minority Health (OMH) established the Office of
Minority Health Resource Center (OMHRC) to meet the public's
need for reliable, accurate, and timely information and technical
assistance on issues affecting the health of minority populations.
Since that time, OMHRC has grown to become one of the nation's
largest sources of minority health information. Some of OMHRC's
services include referrals, publications, reference information,
and access to its resource person's network -- a database of
minority health professionals from across the country.
Plain Language Pediatric Patient Education: Handouts
The handouts in this compendium include pronunciation, guides, simple and purposeful illustrations, lower reading levels, and minimal medical jargan for 25 common pediatric conditions and issues. This
web site is designed to assist health care organizations throughout
the U.S. in providing high quality, culturally competent services
to multi-ethnic populations. The section on “Health Disparities”
features a presentation by COCP member, Dr. Denice Cora-Bramble.
Publication and Reports on Culturally Effective Pediatric
Care:
Compendium
of Cultural Competence Initiatives in Health Care
This compendium was developed by the Henry J. Kaiser Family
Foundation. The initiatives included in the compendium are divided into two categories: Public
Sector Initiatives (Federal/state/local) and Private Sector
Initiatives (health care institutions or professional organizations,
foundations, academic institutions/policy research organizations,
and other).
Cultural
Competence and Health Care Disparities: Key Perspectives and
Trends
By Joseph R. Betancourt, Alexander R. Green, J. Emilio Carillo,
and Elyse R. Park. Published by Health Affairs, 24,
no 2 (2005): 499-505.
National
Survey of Physicians Part I: Doctors on Disparities in Medical
Care
Selected findings from the Kaiser Family Foundation’s
forthcoming National Survey of Physicians reveal that most
physicians are aware of racial disparities in medical treatment
for specific conditions, but they don’t believe it is
a widespread problem. Kaiser Family Foundation, March 2002.
National
Healthcare Disparities Report
The National Healthcare Disparities Report, developed by the
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, represents the first national
comprehensive effort to measure differences in access and
use of health care services by various populations. The report
includes a broad set of performance measures that can serve
as baseline views of differences in the use of services.
Providing
Language Interpretation Services in Health Care Settings:
Examples from the Field
Published by The Commonwealth Fund. Mara Youdelman and Jane
Perkins, May 2002.
Reducing
Health Disparities Through a Focus on Communities
The report presents evidence from research and practice of
the key role that neighborhood factors play in determining
health outcomes and explores the relationship between the
communities in which people live and their health."PolicyLink,
November 2002.
Unequal
Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health
Care
Report from the Institute of Medicine, March 2002, supporting
the long-held perception that minorities tend to receive lower-quality
health care than whites, even when insurance status, income,
age and severity of conditions are comparable.
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