Literature DB >> 15960771

The politics of racial disparities: desegregating the hospitals in Jackson, Mississippi.

David Barton Smith1.   

Abstract

As health care policymakers and providers focus on eliminating the persistent racial disparities in treatment, it is useful to explore how resistance to hospital desegregation was overcome. Jackson, Mississippi, provides an instructive case study of how largely concealed deliberations achieved the necessary concessions in a still rigidly segregated community. The Veterans Administration hospital, the medical school hospital, and the private nonprofit facilities were successively desegregated, owing mainly to the threatened loss of federal dollars. Many of the changes, however, were cosmetic. In contrast to the powerful financial incentives offered to hospitals to desegregate and ensure equal access in the early years of the Medicare program, current trends in federal reimbursement encourage segregation and disparities in treatment.

Keywords:  Health Care and Public Health

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15960771      PMCID: PMC2690142          DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2005.00346.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Milbank Q        ISSN: 0887-378X            Impact factor:   4.911


  8 in total

1.  Long waits, small spaces, and compassionate care: memories of race and medicine in a mid-twentieth-century southern community.

Authors:  L M Pohl
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 1.314

2.  Black power in the 1920's: the case of Tuskegee Veterans Hospital.

Authors:  P Daniel
Journal:  J South Hist       Date:  1970

3.  Professional and hospital discrimination and the US Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit 1956-1967.

Authors:  P Preston Reynolds
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2004-05       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Beaches, blood, and ballots: a black doctor's civil rights struggle. [Review of: Mason, G. R.; Smith, J. P. Beaches, blood, and ballots: a black doctor's civil rights struggle. Jackson: U. Pr. of Mississippi, 2000].

Authors:  Michael Butler
Journal:  J South Hist       Date:  2002

5.  Promoting civil rights through the welfare state: how Medicare integrated Southern hospitals.

Authors:  J Quadagno
Journal:  Soc Probl       Date:  2000

6.  The racial segregation of hospital care revisited: Medicare discharge patterns and their implications.

Authors:  D B Smith
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1998-03       Impact factor: 9.308

7.  Good-bye to Jim Crow: the desegregation of Southern hospitals, 1945-70.

Authors:  E H Beardsley
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 1.314

8.  Hospitals and Civil Rights, 1945-1963: the case of Simkins v Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital.

Authors:  P P Reynolds
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1997-06-01       Impact factor: 25.391

  8 in total
  3 in total

1.  Racial disparities in care: looking beyond the clinical encounter.

Authors:  Mary L Fennell
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2005-12       Impact factor: 3.402

2.  Race, Medical Mistrust, and Segregation in Primary Care as Usual Source of Care: Findings from the Exploring Health Disparities in Integrated Communities Study.

Authors:  M J Arnett; R J Thorpe; D J Gaskin; J V Bowie; T A LaVeist
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2016-06       Impact factor: 3.671

3.  Tuskegee redux: evolution of legal mandates for human experimentation.

Authors:  Robert S Levine; Jamila C Williams; Barbara A Kilbourne; Paul D Juarez
Journal:  J Health Care Poor Underserved       Date:  2012-11
  3 in total

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