Pubdate: Fri, 27 Nov 1998 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1998 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Laura Meckler, AP SHALALA SEEKS TO CUT HEALTH GAP BETWEEN WHITES, BLACKS IN U.S. ATLANTA -- Decades after the civil rights movement forced America to confront racial inequities, disturbing disparities remain on one of the most basic human levels: Blacks get sick easier, stay sick longer and die sooner than whites. ``We have been -- and remain -- two nations: one majority, one minority -- separated by the quality of our health,'' said Secretary Donna Shalala, whose Department of Health and Human Services has launched a $400 million program to attack the problem. ``The time has come to stop accepting disparities with resignation.'' Shorter life expectancy From day one, a black baby's life expectancy is 6 1/2 years shorter than a white baby's. Blacks are more likely to be born too small and less likely to survive their first year. At work and in schools, blacks have made impressive gains. Poverty has fallen. Still, disparities in health remain and in some cases are worsening -- even among middle-class blacks with health insurance and college degrees. Asthma, hypertension, cancer. Name the disease and chances are blacks face a higher risk. They're nearly twice as likely to die of a stroke than whites, 40 percent more likely to die of heart disease. Blacks' cancer death rates are 35 percent higher. Other racial minorities also face disparities -- Vietnamese women have five times as much cervical cancer, and American Indians have twice as much diabetes as whites. But among African-Americans, the gap cuts across nearly every major disease. It's 9 a.m., and 26 people wait at the West End Medical Center in a poor part of Atlanta. ``We're in the trenches here,'' says Dr. Miguel Stubbs, who like most of the staff and patients is black. On the first floor, pediatricians give immunizations with a shot of advice about reading aloud to children. Upstairs, nutritionists counsel diabetics to avoid sugar. Midwives encourage pregnant women to stay away from cigarettes. The problems are multifaceted. It's poverty and the poor access to care that comes with it. It's nutrition. And it's a health system that blacks don't always trust -- and that's not always trustworthy. Standing in West End's gray hallway, Lillian Boodle waits to talk with a nutritionist about her diabetes. She doesn't always take her drugs because they're so expensive. ``I take it one day and not the next,'' she says. ``I don't discuss it with the doctor because I know he wouldn't agree.'' It's not unusual for poor patients to take medicine every other day to stretch out a prescription, doctors say. And blacks are more than twice as likely as whites to be poor and nearly twice as likely to be without health insurance. Still, health problems go beyond the ability to pay. Latinos are less insured and poorer as a group, yet the health gap between Latinos and whites is not as dramatic. In fact, health disparities persist even among blacks who are in the middle class. Health improves for all races as income and education increase, yet the gap between blacks and whites remains. Societal stresses Why? Public-health experts note that even middle-class blacks face extra stresses of living in a white-dominant society that still contains racism. And they suggest that some middle-class blacks may have grown up poor, with early influences still affecting their health. ``You're never dealing with a person just today. You're dealing with everything they've been exposed to throughout their lives,'' says the nation's surgeon general, Dr. David Satcher. ``Does it ever end? Our hypothesis is that it never ends.'' - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry