Author:
Fancher Nicholas,Saha Bibek,Young Kurtis,Corpuz Austin,Cheng Shirley,Fontaine Angelique,Schiff-Elfalan Teresa,Omori Jill
Abstract
Purpose
In the state of Hawaii, it has been shown that certain ethnic minority groups, such as Filipinos and Pacific Islanders, suffer disproportionally high rates of cardiovascular disease, evidence that local health-care systems and governing bodies fail to equally extend the human right to health to all. This study aims to examine whether these ethnic health disparities in cardiovascular disease persist even within an already globally disadvantaged group, the houseless population of Hawaii.
Design/methodology/approach
A retrospective chart review of records from Hawaii Houseless Outreach and Medical Education Project clinic sites from 2016 to 2020 was performed to gather patient demographics and reported histories of type II diabetes, obesity, hyperlipidemia, hypertension and other cardiovascular disease diagnoses. Reported disease prevalence rates were compared between larger ethnic categories as well as ethnic subgroups.
Findings
Unexpectedly, the data revealed lower reported prevalence rates of most cardiometabolic diseases among the houseless compared to the general population. However, multiple ethnic health disparities were identified, including higher rates of diabetes and obesity among Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders and higher rates of hypertension among Filipinos and Asians overall. The findings suggest that even within a generally disadvantaged houseless population, disparities in health outcomes persist between ethnic groups and that ethnocultural considerations are just as important in caring for this vulnerable population.
Originality/value
To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first comprehensive study focusing on ethnic health disparities in cardiovascular disease and the structural processes that contribute to them, among a houseless population in the ethnically diverse state of Hawaii.
Reference50 articles.
1. Causes of death among homeless people: a population-based cross-sectional study of linked hospitalisation and mortality data in England;Wellcome Open Research,2019
2. Geographical maldistribution of native Hawaiian and other pacific islander physicians in hawai’i;Hawai’i Journal of Medicine & Public Health: A Journal of Asia Pacific Medicine & Public Health,2012
3. Health care utilization among women on O’ahu: implications for native Hawaiian women;Pacific Health Dialog,2001
4. Supports and obstacles to cancer survival for Hawaii’s native people;Cancer Practice,2002
5. Dietary inadequacies among US homeless families: an enduring problem;Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved,2018