Righting the Wrong of Social Injustice in Health
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Why it matters?Why act now?
Health Equity and Young Children Conference
May 29, 2013Maxine Hayes, MD, MPH
Washington State Department of Health
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10 Things to Remember about Health1. Health is more than health care.2. Health is tied to the distribution of resources.3. Racism imposes an added health burden.4. The choices we make are shaped by the choices we
have.5. High demand + low control = chronic stress.6. Chronic stress can be deadly.7. Inequality – economic and political – is bad for our
health.8. Social policy is health policy.9. Health inequalities are not natural.10. We all pay the price for poor health.
“Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health is the most shocking and the most inhumane.”
Martin Luther King Jr. – March 25, 19662nd National Convention of the Medical Committee for Human
Rights
“Nowhere are the divisions of race and ethnicity more sharply drawn than in the health of our people…no matter what the reason, racial and ethnic disparities in health are unacceptable in a country that values equality and equal opportunity for all.”
Bill Clinton – February 21, 1998
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Health Disparities vs. Inequities
• Disparity only defines differences between groups.
• Inequity describes the “causes” of disparities in the context of environmental conditions that are required to generate parity and equality.
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Inequities result in disparities in health status that are “unfair, unjust, avoidable and unnecessary.”
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Healthy People 2010 addressed the need to eliminate disparities, but
these disparities are rooted in societal inequities manifested
through institutional racism, income gaps, entrenched poverty and social
injustice!
A new vision for Healthy People 2020 is needed.
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Why inequities matter?
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Health OlympicsHealth Olympics 2002
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Not everyone has equal opportunity for health
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Inequalities in Opportunity Start Early
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“Getting it right in the beginning is getting it
right!”Maxine Hayes, MD, MPH
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Health Education
Economic Development
Human Services
SCIENCE OF EARLY
CHILDHOOD
An Integrated Science of Early Childhood Development Could Drive More Productive
Investments Across Sectors
Timing is Everything!
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Abundance of Opportunity for Policy, Programs and Services
• Health Reform (ACA)• Home Visiting (MIECHV) • Early child and brain development science • Early child care and education funds• Race to the Top Grants (RTT)• Community Transformation Grants• Early Childhood Comprehensive Systems Grants• Child Care and Development Funds• Head Start• State funded Pre-K• Early Childhood Advisory Councils• BUILD Initiatives• Project Launch• QRIS• Reach Out and Read
How can we use a racial equity lens to help inform our
approach in supporting the development of an early
learning system at the local and state level?
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Washington State’sEssential Question
Washington State’s approach to RETOC and
early learning
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“Impossible is just a big word thrown around by
small men who find it easier to live in the world they’ve been given than to explore
the power they have to change it.”
Muhammad Ali
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“We must all have the audacity to believe we can transform the current system”
Maxine Hayes, MD, MPH
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