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7 Ind. J.L. & Soc. Equal. 1 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/injlaseq7 and id is 1 raw text is: 






Addressing Racial Disparities in Health Care One
                   Inequality   at a Time:
                 Total  Knee   Replacement


                 Frank   Griffin, M.D., J.D.*



INTRODUCTION

Distinctions  of  race, nationality,  colour, and   creed are
unknown within the portals of the temple of Aesculapius.
Sir William  Osler


       Independent of income or insurance status, racial
disparities in  utilization of beneficial medical  procedures
are  well  documented, and the largest disparity in the
United States is between African Americans and
Caucasians.2   Since  the enactment   of Title VI  of the Civil
Rights   Act  of  1964   (Title VI),  racial  bias  has   been
prohibited  for  health  care  providers  receiving  Medicare
and   Medicaid   funding,3   but  racial  disparities  persist.
According   to the Institute of Medicine  (1GM),  there  is no
evidence   that  any  significant proportion   of health  care
professionals   in   the  United States harbors overtly
prejudicial attitudes,4 So the cause  appears  to be complex

* Dr. Griffin is an Adjunct Professor and Health Law Scholar-in-Residence at
the University of Arkansas School of Law and is an Adjunct Clinical
Assistant Professor in Orthopedic Surgery at the University of Arkansas for
Medical Sciences.
1 THE QUOTABLE OSLER, Revised Paperback Edition, 71 (American College of
Physicians 2008) (explaining that Aesculapius is the Greek god of healing
and patron deity of physicians).
2 Ruqaiijah Yearby, Breaking the Cycle of Unequal Treatment with Health
Care Reform: Acknowledging and Addressing the Continuation of Racial Bias,
44 CONN. L. REv. 1281, 1287 (2012); Alan R. Nelson, Unequal Treatment:
Report of the Institute of Medicine on Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health
Care, 76 ANN. THORAC. SURG. S1377, S1377 (2003) (noting disparities in
cardiac surgeries, kidney procedures, total joint replacement surgeries, and
many other medically beneficial procedures); see also Rene Bowser, The
Affordable Care Act and Beyond: Opportunities for Advancing Health Equity
and Social Justice, 10 HASTINGS RACE & POVERTY L.J. 69, 75-77 (2013)
(noting that racial minorities receive a lower quality and intensity of health
care than white patients, even when they are insured at the same levels,
have similar incomes, and present with the same types of health problems.);
see also Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), African American
Health: Creating Equal Opportunities for Health, VITAL SIGNS (May 2, 2017),
https://www.cde.gov/vitalsigns/aahealth/index.html.
3 Yearby, supra note 2, at 1288.
4 Nelson, supra note 2, at S1377.

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