Patient Care Access News

How Has 20th Century Health Policy Affected Racial Health Disparities?

Improvements made at the hands of policymaking for Medicare, Medicaid, and ACA indicate further action to shape racial health disparities.

health policy changes still need to close racial health disparities

Source: Getty Images

By Sara Heath

- Landmark civil rights legislation that instituted Medicare and Medicaid was instrumental in closing racial health disparities in care utilization, according to new data in JAMA Network Open. But those improvements only lasted for a few years before gaps in care widened to historical levels, calling into question current health policy debates around health equity, researchers said.

Currently, White people typically receive more healthcare than Black people, a paradoxical trend, the researchers said, considering inequities in disease burden that disproportionately impact populations of color.

“Black people in the US have higher rates of chronic conditions, such as diabetes and hypertension, and shorter life expectancy than their White counterparts,” they wrote in the study’s introduction. “Hence, ambulatory medical care use, if allocated solely based on need, would be higher for Black people.”