拉丁美洲高血压治疗医疗管理中的种族和性别歧视

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISEASE
Luis Alcocer, Ernesto L Schiffrin, Gregory Fink, Mariela M Gironacci, María Claudia Irigoyen, Ana C Palei, Minolfa Prieto, Henry Punzi, Dora Inés Molina de Salazar, Carlos I Ponte-Negretti, Jose Ortellado, Ernesto Peñaherrera, Daniel Piskorz, Martin Rosas, Osiris Valdez, Raúl Villar, Fernando Wyss, Carlos M Ferrario
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引用次数: 0

摘要

心血管保健方面的歧视,特别是高血压治疗方面的歧视,在拉丁美洲是一个重要而复杂的问题,其驱动因素是与性别、种族和经济地位有关的偏见。尽管心血管疾病(CVD)是世界范围内导致死亡的主要原因,但医疗保健服务方面的差距仍然存在,尤其是对边缘人群的影响。妇女、少数民族和经济上处于不利地位的群体遇到了相当大的障碍,包括临床研究中代表性不足、诊断延误以及获得指南推荐治疗的机会不平等。经济差距使医疗保健系统处于分裂状态,治疗质量往往与社会经济地位直接相关,从而加剧了不公平现象,并对低收入社区的健康结果产生不利影响。源于根深蒂固的社会偏见的种族歧视导致护理不足和获得先进医疗技术的机会有限,对土著和非洲裔人口的影响尤为严重。要解决这些系统性不平等问题,需要采取综合战略,确保公平参与临床试验,制定对社会经济和文化背景敏感的有针对性的公共卫生政策,并实施有针对性的教育举措。卫生保健系统必须积极消除根深蒂固的偏见,改善经济弱势群体的获得机会,并保证少数民族获得同等质量的治疗。美洲高血压学会强调,消除这些歧视性障碍可以减轻心血管疾病的负担,并提高整个拉丁美洲的总体健康结果。本文件赞同第1至4条中详述的共识建议,这些建议解决了与个性化护理、治疗算法中的种族偏见、社会经济卫生保健不平等和高血压管理中的性别差异相关的具体挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Racial and Gender Discrimination When Tailoring Medical Management to Hypertension Treatment in Latin America.

Discrimination in cardiovascular healthcare, particularly concerning hypertension treatment, is a significant and complex issue in Latin America, driven by biases related to gender, ethnicity, and economic status. Although cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death worldwide, disparities in healthcare delivery endure, especially impacting marginalized populations. Women, ethnic minorities, and economically disadvantaged groups encounter considerable barriers, including underrepresentation in clinical research, delayed diagnoses, and unequal access to guideline-recommended treatments. Economic disparities maintain a divided healthcare system in which the quality of treatment often directly correlates with socioeconomic status, reinforcing inequities and adversely affecting health outcomes in lower-income communities. Ethnic discrimination, stemming from deeply ingrained social biases, leads to inadequate care and limited access to advanced medical technologies, disproportionately impacting indigenous and Afro-descendant populations. Addressing these systemic inequities requires comprehensive strategies that ensure equitable participation in clinical trials, develop tailored public health policies sensitive to socioeconomic and cultural contexts, and implement targeted educational initiatives. Healthcare systems must actively dismantle entrenched biases, improve access for economically disadvantaged communities, and guarantee that ethnic minorities receive treatment of equal quality. The Inter-American Society of Hypertension emphasizes that removing these discriminatory barriers reduces the burden of cardiovascular disease and enhances overall health outcomes across Latin America. This document endorses consensus recommendations detailed in positions 1 through 4, which tackle specific challenges related to personalized care, racial biases in treatment algorithms, socioeconomic healthcare inequalities, and gender disparities in hypertension management.

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来源期刊
American Journal of Hypertension
American Journal of Hypertension 医学-外周血管病
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
6.20%
发文量
144
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Hypertension is a monthly, peer-reviewed journal that provides a forum for scientific inquiry of the highest standards in the field of hypertension and related cardiovascular disease. The journal publishes high-quality original research and review articles on basic sciences, molecular biology, clinical and experimental hypertension, cardiology, epidemiology, pediatric hypertension, endocrinology, neurophysiology, and nephrology.
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