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Researchers: Fix healthcare disparities

ANN ARBOR, Mich., Aug. 15 (UPI) -- U.S. healthcare reform won't be adequate if disparities related to such factors as race and social status are not addressed, two researchers say.

Drs. Matthew M. Davis and Jennifer K. Walter, both of the University of Michigan Health System, say there are pervasive and persistent disparities in healthcare.

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The Affordable Care act, they say, must address disparities related to sex, race, ethnicity, social class and insurance status.

"Individuals deserve healthcare that is not only of high quality but of high quality for all," Davis, co-director of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars program at the University of Michigan in which Walter is a research fellow, says in a statement.

"If we don't address disparities in health and healthcare, we will fundamentally limit how much healthcare quality can improve."

For example, the recent history of U.S. childhood vaccination efforts illustrates how effective policies can be when disparities are not only acknowledged but tackled head-on, Davis says.

"A generation ago, many disadvantaged kids died of measles in the inner cities of the U.S., essentially because our vaccination efforts were of poor quality," Davis says. "But today, with a clear priority on measuring and fixing those disparities through lots of hard work, we now have substantially reduced disparities and improved our quality in childhood vaccination."

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The commentary appears online ahead of print in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

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