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AJPH First Look, published online ahead of print May 30, 2006
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AJPH.2006.085530v1
96/7/1152    most recent
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Jacqueline L. Angel
Ronald J. Angel
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American Journal of Public Health, 10.2105/AJPH.2006.085530


Commentaries

Minority Group Status and Healthful Aging: Does Social Structure Still Matter?

Jacqueline L. Angel 1* Ronald J. Angel 2

1 The University of Texas at Austin
2 University of Texas at Austin

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jangel{at}mail.utexas.edu.


   Abstract

During the last 4 decades, a rapid increase has occurred in the number of survey-based and epidemiological studies of the health profiles of adults in general and of the causes of disparities between majority and minority Americans in particular. According to these studies, healthful aging consists of the absence of disease, or at least of the most serious preventable diseases and their consequences, and findings consistently reveal serious African-American and Hispanic disadvantages in terms of healthful aging.

We (1) briefly review conceptual and operational definitions of race and Hispanic ethnicity, (2) summarize how ethnicity-based differentials in health are related to social structures, and (3) emphasize the importance of attention to the economic, political, and institutional factors that perpetuate poverty and undermine healthful aging among certain groups.

Key Words: Aging, Health Policy, Access to Care, African Americans/Blacks, Hispanics/Latinos, Socioeconomic Factors







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