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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 24, 1999
#99-04
NIEHS CONTACT:
Tom Hawkins
(919) 541-1402

24 Mar 1999: Workshops Seek Clues to Health Disparity

Not Just Access to Health Care
BETWEEN THE POOR AND THE AFFLUENT

Less income often means poorer health and a shorter life. People with lower socioeconomic status suffer more infant mortality, cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular disease. But why is that? Must it be? If, as it seems, the problem is not simply a lack of medical care, how can the health gap be closed?

Three regional workshops sponsored by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (http://www.niehs.nih.gov) are trying to determine what research might answer these questions. The first of these workshops was held at Oakland, Calif., and the others will be in Baltimore, May 26-28 and Chicago, July 7-9.

Oakland participants ranged from a science center director to an artist concerned about health risks faced by people in the community. The Oakland workshop won strong support from attendees including Joan Reiss, public policy advocate with the Breast Cancer Fund. She sent a letter to NIH Director Harold Varmus, co-signed by 28 other participants, that said, "This is truly an agenda for the 21st Century."

Oakland workshop participants recommended development of a working definition of socioeconomic status, aka SES, development of more " low SES friendly" risk assessment instruments and investigations of individual variations in response to exposures.

NIEHS Director Kenneth Olden (http://www.niehs.nih.gov/about/od/pastdirectors/kennetholden.cfm) said, "Disparities are often taken for granted, but the people who come together for these workshops are not satisfied with that. We are looking for research directions that will help change these patterns for the better, so that poor health for less affluent people is no longer considered a given."

Breakout groups at the workshops discuss such things as air quality health risks, lead and other heavy metal exposures, agricultural chemical exposures, and community participation in research.

More information about the workshops and registration can be found at www.niehs.nih.gov/translat/hd/gap.htm (URL no longer available) or contact conference coordinator Michelle Beckner at (703) 902-1269.

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Last Reviewed: June 19, 2007