概化理论
民族
社会经济地位
卫生公平
队列
老年学
医学
人口学
种族(生物学)
太平洋岛民
人口
心理学
公共卫生
环境卫生
发展心理学
政治学
社会学
性别研究
护理部
内科学
法学
作者
Colby Lewis,Jack Huebner,George Hripcsak,Maya Sabatello
出处
期刊:Nature Medicine
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2023-10-26
卷期号:29 (11): 2742-2747
被引量:10
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41591-023-02607-x
摘要
Blind and deaf individuals comprise large populations that often experience health disparities, with those from marginalized gender, racial, ethnic and low-socioeconomic communities commonly experiencing compounded health inequities. Including these populations in precision medicine research is critical for scientific benefits to accrue to them. We assessed representation of blind and deaf people in the All of Us Research Program (AoURP) 2018-2023 cohort of participants who provided electronic health records and compared it with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2018 national estimates by key demographic characteristics and intersections thereof. Blind and deaf AoURP participants are considerably underrepresented in the cohort, especially among working-age adults (younger than age 65 years), as well as Asian and multi-racial participants. Analyses show compounded underrepresentation at the intersection of multiple marginalization (that is, racial or ethnic minoritized group, female sex, low education and low income), most substantively for working-age blind participants identifying as Black or African American female with education levels lower than high school (representing one-fifth of their national prevalence). Underrepresentation raises concerns about the generalizability of findings in studies that use these data and limited benefits for the already underserved blind and deaf populations.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI