Polednak A P
Connecticut Department of Public Health, Hartford 06134, USA.
J Urban Health. 2000 Sep;77(3):501-7. doi: 10.1007/BF02386757.
The black/white ratio of death rates (before 65 years of age) in 1994-1996 for a group of "sentinel" causes, regarded as preventable by medical treatment and as useful in assessing overall quality of health care, was examined for 60 US counties located in large metropolitan areas. Counties with the highest black/white death rate ratios (>3.5) and the highest death rates for blacks included the District of Columbia; Essex (Newark), New Jersey; Cook (Chicago), Illinois; Wayne (Detroit), Michigan; and Dade (Miami), Florida. In these five counties, in contrast to the US, the death rate from the sentinel causes for blacks had not declined from 1979-1981 to 1994-1996. The findings suggest that racial inequities in health care may be unusually great in certain counties in large metropolitan areas, and that further studies are needed to explain the variation among counties in the black-white ratio of mortality from the sentinel causes.
1994 - 1996年,针对一组被视为可通过医疗手段预防且有助于评估整体医疗保健质量的“哨兵”病因,对位于大都市区的60个美国县65岁以下人群的死亡率黑白比进行了研究。黑白死亡率比值最高(>3.5)且黑人死亡率最高的县包括哥伦比亚特区;新泽西州埃塞克斯县(纽瓦克);伊利诺伊州库克县(芝加哥);密歇根州韦恩县(底特律);以及佛罗里达州戴德县(迈阿密)。与美国其他地区形成对比的是,在这五个县,从1979 - 1981年到1994 - 1996年,黑人因“哨兵”病因导致的死亡率并未下降。研究结果表明,在大都市区的某些县,医疗保健方面的种族不平等现象可能格外严重,并且需要进一步研究来解释各县之间因“哨兵”病因导致的死亡率黑白比存在差异的原因。