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ADDRESSING RACIAL DISPARITIES IN HEALTH USING LIFE COURSE PERSPECTIVES
Toward a Constructive Criticism1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2011
Abstract
In the United States, African Americans face stark inequalities in health. The life course perspective offers a unique viewpoint through which racial disparities in morbidity and mortality may be understood as the result of repeated exposures to risk factors during both childhood and adulthood. However, the utility of this approach is limited by its failure to investigate the degree to which racial/ethnic minorities are able to translate gains in socioeconomic status into favorable health outcomes, both for themselves and for their children. In order to adequately reflect the realities of marginalized groups, life course models must explore the interactive nature of linkages across lifecourse stages, pay particular attention to the unique processes that create and maintain health disparities over time, and consider the specific contexts in which these processes occur. To this end, I examine the ways in which exclusionary forces and discriminatory conditions are likely to prevent African American women and their children from reaping the health benefits typically associated with upward socioeconomic mobility.
- Type
- Moving Forward in Studying Racial Disparities in Health
- Information
- Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race , Volume 8 , Issue 1: Special Issue: Racial Inequality and Health , Spring 2011 , pp. 79 - 94
- Copyright
- Copyright © W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research 2011
Footnotes
The author would like to thank Arline Geronimus, John Bound, Sherman James, Pam Smock, David Williams, John Casterline, and three anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments on earlier drafts. Dr. Colen also gratefully acknowledges support from the National Institute of Child and Human Development (NICHD) through a training grant (T32HD007339) to the Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan as well as the Robert Wood Johnson Health and Society Scholars Program at Columbia University.
References
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