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      The Opioid Crisis in Black Communities

      1 , 1
      The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics
      SAGE Publications

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          Racial and Ethnic Disparities in the Quality of Health Care.

          The annual National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Reports document widespread and persistent racial and ethnic disparities. These disparities result from complex interactions between patient factors related to social disadvantage, clinicians, and organizational and health care system factors. Separate and unequal systems of health care between states, between health care systems, and between clinicians constrain the resources that are available to meet the needs of disadvantaged groups, contribute to unequal outcomes, and reinforce implicit bias. Recent data suggest slow progress in many areas but have documented a few notable successes in eliminating these disparities. To eliminate these disparities, continued progress will require a collective national will to ensure health care equity through expanded health insurance coverage, support for primary care, and public accountability based on progress toward defined, time-limited objectives using evidence-based, sufficiently resourced, multilevel quality improvement strategies that engage patients, clinicians, health care organizations, and communities.
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            Time to take stock: a meta-analysis and systematic review of analgesic treatment disparities for pain in the United States.

            The recent Institute of Medicine Report assessing the state of pain care in the United States acknowledged the lack of consistent data to describe the nature and magnitude of unrelieved pain and identify subpopulations with disproportionate burdens.
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              The War on Drugs That Wasn’t: Wasted Whiteness, “Dirty Doctors,” and Race in Media Coverage of Prescription Opioid Misuse

              The past decade in the U.S. has been marked by a media fascination with the white prescription opioid cum heroin user. In this paper, we contrast media coverage of white non-medical opioid users with that of black and brown heroin users to show how divergent representations lead to different public and policy responses. A content analysis of 100 popular press articles from 2001 and 2011 in which half describe heroin users and half describe prescription opioid users revealed a consistent contrast between criminalized urban black and Latino heroin injectors with sympathetic portrayals of suburban white prescription opioid users. Media coverage of the suburban and rural opioid “epidemic” of the 2000s helped draw a symbolic, and then legal, distinction between (urban) heroin addiction and (suburban and rural) prescription opioid addiction that is reminiscent of the legal distinction between crack cocaine and powder cocaine of the 1980s and 90s. This distinction reinforces the racialized deployment of the War on Drugs and is sustained by the lack of explicit discussion of race in the service of “color blind ideology.” We suggest potential correctives to these racially divergent patterns, in the form of socially responsible media practices and of clinical engagement with public policy.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics
                J Law Med Ethics
                SAGE Publications
                1073-1105
                1748-720X
                July 17 2018
                June 2018
                July 17 2018
                June 2018
                : 46
                : 2
                : 404-421
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Keturah James is a student at Yale Law School in New Haven, Connecticut. Ayana Jordan, M.D., Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor, Addiction Psychiatrist, and Attending Physician at Yale University School of Medicine.
                Article
                10.1177/1073110518782949
                30146996
                37f2f9ae-08b8-4a4e-84cd-3d56db05428c
                © 2018

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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