Lack of Minority Physicians
Hispanics, African Americans, and American
Indians are grossly underrepresented in the U.S. physician
workforce.(1)
Communities with high
proportions of African
American and Hispanic
residents are four times as likely
as others to
have a
shortage of physicians, regardless, of community income.
(2)
Many minority doctors are
inclined to
serve
members of their own ethnicity and the poor.(1)
Patients are more likely
to be
cared for by physicians of their own ethnic background than by
physicians
of other backgrounds.(3)
Hispanic physicians are
more
involved
with the needs of Medicaid patients, and the generalists among
them
practice in geographic areas in which the poor and
Hispanics were
overrepresented in the population.(1)
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References
1. Fryer GE, Jr., Green LA, Vojir CP, et al.
Hispanic versus white,
non-Hispanic physician medical practices in Colorado. J
Health Care
Poor Underserved 2001;12(3):342-51. 2. Komaromy M, Grumbach K, Drake M, et al. The role of black and Hispanic
physicians in providing health care for underserved populations. N Engl
J Med
1996;334(20):1305-10. 3. Xu G, Fields SK, Laine C, Veloski JJ, Barzansky B, Martini CJ. The
relationship between the race/ethnicity of generalist physicians and
their care
for underserved populations. Am J Public Health
1997;87(5):817-22. This research was supported by a National Library of Medicine (NLM)
Publication Grant #5G08 LM07653-02 in support of the creation of a web site
titled Factline: Tracking Health in Underserved Communities, www.factline.org.
Saqi S. Maleque, MSPH, Researcher, Principal Investigator: Virginia Brennan,
PhD.
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