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Review Article
Medical Progress
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Volume 343:1545-1552 November 23, 2000 Number 21
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Renal Transplantation in Black Americans
Carlton J. Young, M.D., and Robert S. Gaston, M.D.

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Despite remarkable social changes in the United States during the past century, issues related to race and ethnic background continue to permeate public discourse regarding health care.1,2 The influence of race on the delivery of care for end-stage renal disease remains especially controversial because of two seemingly unrelated factors. First, the incidence of kidney failure among black Americans is disproportionately high, resulting in the demographic anomaly of black overrepresentation in the population with end-stage renal disease. Second, passage of the Social Security Amendments of 1972 entitled virtually all people in the United States with end-stage renal disease to Medicare-funded dialysis . . . [Full Text of this Article]

End-Stage Renal Disease in Black Americans

Therapy for End-Stage Renal Disease in Black Americans

Outcome of Renal Transplantation in Black Americans

Nonimmunologic Variables

Immunologic Variables

Integrating Immunologic and Nonimmunologic Causes of Graft Loss

Conclusions


Source Information

From the Department of Surgery, Division of Transplantation (C.J.Y., R.S.G.), and the Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology (R.S.G.), University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham.

Address reprint requests to Dr. Gaston at the Division of Nephrology, 625 THT, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1530 3rd Ave. S., Birmingham, AL 35294-0006, or at rgaston@nrtc.dom.uab.edu.

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