In 2003, the National Academies Press published a landmark report, Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care, that shocked many policymakers and the medical establishment with its finding that racial and ethnic disparities in the quality of care are “remarkably consistent,” even after controlling for access-related factors, such as income and insurance status. Despite the national attention this report received, the nation has made little progress toward eliminating health care inequities in the 20 years since the report was published.
As the 20th anniversary of Unequal Treatment approaches, the Urban Institute is launching a new program of action to elevate health care inequities as a national priority and build momentum for key remedies and structural reforms. To kick-off the initiative, we invite you to join us for a full-day symposium designed to bring together policymakers, researchers, health care administrators and professionals, and other interested parties. The symposium will
make evidence of the causes and consequences of health care inequities more accessible to patients, health care consumers, health care industry leaders, and policymakers;
identify the most promising research and policy strategies that have emerged in the 20 years since Unequal Treatment’s publication;
allow interested parties to collaborate to develop tools and mechanisms to hold practitioners and policymakers accountable, particularly at the state level, where key opportunities exist to establish equity-focused strategies; and
elevate the voices of patients from marginalized communities and a new generation of scholars of color whose perspectives must be centered in identifying research questions and solutions.
Kimberlyn Leary, Senior Vice President, Urban Institute
Xavier Becerra, Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services
Richard E. Besser, President and Chief Executive Officer, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health Equity and Health Policy Professor Emerita, University of Pennsylvania
Kimá Joy Taylor, Nonresident Fellow, Health Policy Center, Urban Institute
Brian Smedley, Equity Scholar and Senior Fellow, Health Policy Center, Urban Institute
Keynote
David R. Williams, Florence Sprague Norman and Laura Smart Norman Professor of Public Health and Chair of the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health; Professor of African and African American Studies and Sociology, Harvard University
Welcome from Commonwealth Fund
Joseph R. Betancourt, President, The Commonwealth Fund
Payment Reform:How can payment reform work to eliminate inequities? How can we direct resources where needed?
Charmaine Bartholomew, Vice President Quality Risk Adjustment and Health Equity, North Carolina Blue Cross/Blue Shield
Marshall Chin, Richard Parrillo Family Professor of Healthcare Ethics, Department of Medicine, University of Chicago
Mai Pham, President, Institute for Exceptional Care
Carla Willis, Principal Research Associate, Urban Institute
Damon Francis, Medical Director, Homeless Health Center Alameda Health System; Chief Medical Officer, Health Leads; Assistant Clinical Professor, University of California, San Francisco (moderator)
Keynote
Tony Iton, Lecturer of Health Policy and Management and Senior Vice President for Healthy Communities, The California Endowment
Technology-Pros/Cons, Challenges/Opportunities for Advancing Equity
Sinsi Hernandez-Cancio, Vice President for Health Justice, National Partnership for Women and Families
Ameina Mosley, Manager of Community Organizing, Vital CXNs
Carolina Reyes, Associate Physician, Maternal Fetal Medicine, UC Davis Medical Center
Anna Zink, Principal Researcher, Chicago Booth's Center for Applied AI
Joseph R. Betancourt, President, The Commonwealth Fund (moderator)
Political and Legal Determinants of Health and the Current Backlash Against Equity – How Can We Move the Pendulum Forward?
Juliet K. Choi, President and CEO, Asian & Pacific Islander American Health Forum
Dayna Bowen Matthew, Dean and Harold H. Greene Professor of Law, The George Washington University Law School
Margaret Moss, Professor and Director, First Nations House of Learning
Tom Saenz, President and General Counsel, Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund
Daniel Dawes, Senior Vice President, Global Health & Executive Director, Institute of Global Health Equity at Meharry Medical College (moderator)
Closing Keynote
Oxiris Barbot, President and Chief Executive Officer, United Hospital Fund
Importance of Accountability
Robert Otto Valdez, Director, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Concluding Remarks
Faith Mitchell, Institute Fellow, Health Policy Center, Center on Nonprofits and Philanthropy
Funding for this event was provided by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Commonwealth Fund. Additional funding for the Unequal Treatment at 20 initiative provided by Episcopal Health Foundation and California Health Care Foundation. For more on Urban’s funding policies, go to urban.org/about/our-funding.
We strive to host inclusive, accessible events that enable all individuals to engage fully. Please email [email protected] if you require any accommodations or have any questions about this event.
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