Addressing Racial Disparities in Health Care

A Discussion with U.S. Health Care Leaders

Published February 16, 2023

Courses Mentioned in this Post: Reducing Racial Disparities in Health Care
Series mentioned in this post: Health Care Leadership

 

How does the economic stability of a community, city, state, region, or country impact disparities in health care? Are racial disparities and discrimination an issue specific to the U.S., or is it present globally? How can we integrate training on reducing disparities in formal medical training?

Aswita Tan-McGrory, Director of the Disparities Solutions Center at Massachusetts General Hospital, and health care leaders from across the U.S. gathered to answer these questions and more. In this 45-minute webinar, top executives and researchers discussed equity and social justice in the health care landscape today, how the industry has changed since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, and practices to apply in your organization that lead to high-value care for all.

Image
Graphic image of screenshot of zoom webinar on a laptop screen against a gray background

 

Tan-McGrory says, “People sometimes ask me, ‘how do you know that equity has been achieved?’ And I would say that equity is not the end goal because it is really a journey and has to be monitored consistently. It has to be deliberate. We are always learning something new in this field.  It's constantly changing; terminology changes, funding changes, people's willingness to talk about it. We've definitely seen a huge change in the last few years.”

Featured panelists include Lenny Lopez, MD, MDiv, MPH, Chief of Hospital Medicine at the UCSF - San Francisco VA Medical Center; Andrea Madu, MBA, Consultant at The Bridgespan Group and Social Impact and DEI Strategist; and Esteban Barreto, Ph. D., Director of Evaluation of Equity and Community Health at Massachusetts General Hospital. 

“I've learned over time in working with organizations, working within my own organization, to address the systemic barriers is that all the sources of disparities and the solutions for eliminating those disparities are all hyperlocal,” says Lenny Lopez, “and the goal is to learn tools and strategies, for example, the Kotter model, to back to your institution, to your organization, to your community, and your place in the universe. And that's where the change happens”

View the full webinar on how to address disparities in health care here:

The topics discussed in this webinar are not entirely inclusive of the topics addressed in our course, Reducing Racial Disparities in Health Care. 

Related Articles


New Course Announcement: Learn How to Improve Equality in Health Care
This new course will help you deliver high-quality health care to all through organizational change.

 

How to Earn CME Credits with Harvard Online Courses on Health
Physicians Can Earn CME Credits with Harvard Online’s series on Health Care Leadership

 

Related Blog Posts

New Course Announcement: Learn How To Improve Equality In Health Care

Our latest course in the Health Care Leadership Series, Reducing Racial Disparities in Health Care, addresses these exact challenging conversations alongside faculty and industry leaders from Harvard Medical School (HMS), Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (HSPH), and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH).

How To Earn CME Credits with Harvard Online Courses On Health

Harvard University faculty guide you through topics with a focus on the current state of the US health care system and how you can apply innovative approaches to make improvements within your organization.

Aswita Tan-McGrory Examines Why Disparities Exist in Health Care Systems

While quality and access to health care in the U.S. has been improving in recent years, there’s still significant work to do. Aswita Tan-McGrory is one of the leaders at the helm of this transformative work.