From Health Affairs Sunday Update <[email protected]>
Subject Celebrating Black History Month
Date February 25, 2024 1:08 PM
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📢 Join us for Journal Club on 2/26 📢

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Sunday, February 25, 2024 | The Latest Research, Commentary, and News from Health Affairs

Dear John,

Join us tomorrow, February 26, for our Journal Club event featuring a closer look at a new Health Affairs research article, “Housing-Sensitive Health Conditions Can Predict Poor Quality Housing ([link removed] ) ,” that was published in our theme issue focusing on housing and health.

Author Daniel Neill of New York University and Health Affairs Senior Editor Laura Tollen will participate in a detailed discussion of the paper’s data, methods, and policy implications.

health-affairs-event-housing-health-journal-club-02-2024_enewsletter ([link removed] )

Celebrating Black History Month

For the month of February, we are recognizing Black History Month.

Throughout this month, we have been highlighting influential Black voices and organizations who have made an impact on health equity and policy.

Take a moment to look back at a number of featured articles.

In a January 2024 article, Ashley N. Kyalwazi and coauthors discuss the Medicare Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program and how it has disproportionately penalized resource-constrained hospitals caring ([link removed] ) for high proportions of Black adults since its implementation.

From our October 2023 theme issue on Tackling Structural Racism in Health, Zachary Dyer and coauthors discuss the Structural Racism Effect Index ([link removed] ) , which measures exposure to structural racism effects in nine domains. Dyer also shared greater insight on his findings when he appeared on A Health Podyssey ([link removed] ) .

The same theme issue also featured a Narrative Matters essay where Alexis Grant-Panting reflects on why Black women like her have come to fear their birth experiences ([link removed] ) .

Health Affairs Deputy Editor and Correspondent Jessica Bylander reported on how some communities are working to shift the balance of power and succeeding in improving their health ([link removed] ) .

In a May 2023 article, Andrew Anderson and coauthors shed light on the opportunity cost of not addressing disparities when developing cardiovascular disease health care policies ([link removed] ) .

Sign up for our newsletters to never miss our Elevating Voices series as well as monthly observances of cultural and community celebrations in the health policy world.

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Health Affairs Branded Post:

Navigating Medicare Drug Price Negotiation in Oncology: The Need for Real-World Evidence ([link removed] )

Harlan Pittel et al.

Sponsored by Flatiron Health ([link removed] )

Sandra Newman on Housing Vouchers and the Measurable Medical Benefits Provided

Health Affairs' Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil interviews Sandra Newman of the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health on her recent paper that explores the measurable health and related benefits of housing vouchers to families. The benefits observed included parental stress reduction, improved cost burdens, neighborhood safety, and many other impacts.

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About Health Affairs

Health Affairs is the leading peer-reviewed journal ([link removed] ) at the intersection of health, health care, and policy. Published monthly by Project HOPE, the journal is available in print and online.

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