Health
Care Women Int 1996 Mar-Apr;17(2):149-59
Racism and health care access: a dialogue with childbearing women.
Murrell NL, Smith R, Gill G, Oxley G.
The rates of low birth weight and preterm delivery are twice as high
for African Americans as they are for Whites in the United States. Racism
and health care access may be factors in this twofold disparity. To investigate
this possibility, we conducted a qualitative study with African American
prenatal and postpartum women (N = 14). In 1- to 2-hr interviews, we asked
the participants to describe their ability to access health care and their
experiences of racism. We then independently and collectively coded the
data until consensus (95%) was obtained. Data categories included access
to care, treatment, differences in care, stereotypes, and racism. Three
themes emerged from the interviews: (a) the pervasiveness of the stereotype
of pregnant African American women; (b) a care that is indifferent, inaccessible,
and undignified; and (c) the totality of racism. These themes encompass
social, political, and economic factors affecting the experiences of childbearing
African American families and mandate the need for further investigation
and intervention.
PMID: 8852217 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]