Exposing Inequality

Ritu Thamman MD , Samar A. Nasser PhD , Keith C. Ferdinand MD , Sadeer Al-Kindi MD , Eric Brandt MD, MHS
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This review explores the intersection between environmental injustice and cardiovascular (CV) health disparities, highlighting how climate change, pollution, and environmental exposures disproportionately impact vulnerable populations. It delves into environmental racism, showing how non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic, and Native American communities face higher exposure to pollutants and climate-related hazards. This increased exposure contributes to greater CV morbidity and mortality, exacerbated by historical practices such as redlining and insufficient exposure regulations. The review points out the limitations of traditional CV risk models that overlook these environmental factors. Promoting transparency, community-driven solutions, and linking macro policies with local implementation are crucial to combating environmental injustice. It suggests that the emerging field of environmental cardiology can adopt eco-friendly sustainable practices and remote care solutions to reduce health care's carbon footprint, integrate environmental risks into prevention and treatment plans, and advocate for policies that reduce disparities in CV disease outcomes.
揭露不平等
本综述探讨了环境不公正与心血管(CV)健康差异之间的交集,强调了气候变化、污染和环境暴露如何不成比例地影响弱势群体。它深入研究了环境种族主义,展示了非西班牙裔黑人,西班牙裔和美洲原住民社区如何面临更高的污染物和气候相关危害。这种增加的暴露导致了更高的CV发病率和死亡率,并且由于以往的做法(如红线和不充分的暴露法规)而加剧。这篇综述指出了忽视这些环境因素的传统心血管风险模型的局限性。提高透明度、社区驱动的解决方案以及将宏观政策与地方实施联系起来,对于消除环境不公正至关重要。这表明,新兴的环境心脏病学领域可以采用环保的可持续实践和远程护理解决方案,以减少医疗保健的碳足迹,将环境风险纳入预防和治疗计划,并倡导减少心血管疾病结局差异的政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JACC advances
JACC advances Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
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