Black Patients Matter in Neurology: Race, Racism, and Race-Based Neurodisparities.
Nathaniel M RobbinsLarry CharlestonAltaf SaadiZaneta M ThayerWilfred U CodringtonAlden LandryJames L BernatRoy HamiltonPublished in: Neurology (2022)
Black people living in the United States suffer disproportionate morbidity and mortality across a wide range of neurologic conditions. Despite common conceptions to the contrary, "race" is a socially defined construct with little genetic validity. Therefore, racial health inequities in neurology ("neurodisparities") are not a consequence of biologic differences between races. Instead, racism and associated social determinants of health are the root of neurodisparities. To date, many neurologists have neglected racism as a root cause of neurologic disease, further perpetuating the problem. Structural racism, largely ignored in current neurologic practice and policy, drives neurodisparities through mediators such as excessive poverty, inferior health insurance, and poorer access to neurologic and preventative care. Interpersonal racism (implicit or explicit) and associated discriminatory practices in neurologic research, workforce advancement, and medical education also exacerbate neurodisparities. Neurologists cannot fulfill their professional and ethical responsibility to care for Black patients without understanding how racism, not biologic race, drives neurodisparities. In our review of race, racism, and race-based disparities in neurology, we highlight the current literature on neurodisparities across a wide range of neurologic conditions and focus on racism as the root cause. We discuss why all neurologists are ethically and professionally obligated to actively promote measures to counteract racism. We conclude with a call for actions that should be implemented by individual neurologists and professional neurologic organizations to mitigate racism and work towards health equity in neurology.
Keyphrases
- palliative care
- healthcare
- public health
- health insurance
- end stage renal disease
- mental health
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- primary care
- peritoneal dialysis
- affordable care act
- medical education
- gene expression
- chronic pain
- body mass index
- patient reported outcomes
- physical activity
- quality improvement
- genome wide
- decision making
- pain management