Do members of disadvantaged minority groups receive poorer healthcare than whites? Overwhelming evidence shows that they do.1Among national policymakers, there is bipartisan acknowledgmentof this bitter truth. Department of Health and Human Services(DHHS) Secretary Tommy Thompson has said that health disparitiesare a national priority, and congressional Democrats and Republicansare advocating competing remedies.2,3
So why did the DHHS issue a report last year, just days beforeChristmas, dismissing the "implication" that racial differencesin care "result in adverse health outcomes" or "imply moralerror . . . in any way"?4 And why did top officials tell . . . [Full Text of this Article]
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From the Georgetown University Law Center, Washington, D.C., and the Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
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