Race Based Medicine, Colorblind Disease: How Racism in Medicine Harms Us All.Ruqaiijah Yearby -2021 -American Journal of Bioethics 21 (2):19-27.detailsThe genome between socially constructed racial groups is 99.5%–99.9% identical; the 0.1%–0.5% variation between any two unrelated individuals is greatest between individuals in the same racial grou...
Structural Racism and Health Disparities: Reconfiguring the Social Determinants of Health Framework to Include the Root Cause.Ruqaiijah Yearby -2020 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (3):518-526.detailsThe government recognizes that social factors cause racial inequalities in access to resources and opportunities that result in racial health disparities. However, this recognition fails to acknowledge the root cause of these racial inequalities: structural racism. As a result, racial health disparities persist.
Racism-Conscious Praxis: A Framework to Materialize Anti-Oppression in Medicine, Public Health, and Health Policy.Rohan Khazanchi,Derek R. Soled &Ruqaiijah Yearby -2023 -American Journal of Bioethics 23 (4):31-34.detailsLiao and Carbonell explore how oppressive medical technologies constitute materiality insofar as they reflect past oppression, embody oppression in the present day, and carry oppression into the fu...
Reifying Racism in the COVID-19 Pandemic Response.Ruqaiijah Yearby -2021 -American Journal of Bioethics 21 (3):75-78.detailsThis commentary discusses how racism can be perpetuated in two of the areas discussed in Sabatello et al: research for identifying remedies and contact tracing. Racism is a social system where the...
The Social Determinants of Health, Health Disparities, and Health Justice.Ruqaiijah Yearby -2022 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 50 (4):641-649.detailsAlthough the federal government and several state governments have recognized that structural discrimination limits less privileged groups’ ability to be healthy, the measures adopted to eliminate health disparities do not address structural discrimination. Historical and modern-day structural discrimination in employment has limited racial and ethnic minority individuals’ economic conditions by segregating them to low wage jobs that lack benefits, which has been associated with health disparities. Health justice provides a community-driven approach to transform the government’s efforts to eliminate health disparities, (...) by acknowledging the problem of structural discrimination; empowering less privileged groups to create and implement structural change; and providing support to redress harm. (shrink)
Involuntary Consent: Conditioning Access to Health Care on Participation in Clinical Trials.Ruqaiijah A. Yearby -2016 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 44 (3):445-461.detailsAmerican bioethics has served as a safety net for the rich and powerful, often failing to protect minorities and the economically disadvantaged. For example, minorities and the economically disadvantaged are often unduly influenced into participating in clinical trials that promise monetary gain or access to health care. This is a violation of the bioethical principle of “respect for persons,” which requires that informed consent for participation in clinical trials is voluntary and free of undue influence. Promises of access to health (...) care invalidate the voluntariness of informed consent not only because it unduly induces minorities and the economically disadvantaged to participate in clinical trials to obtain access to potentially life saving health care, but it is also manipulative because some times the clinical trial is conducted by the very institutions that are denying minorities and the economically disadvantaged access to health care. To measure whether consent is voluntary and free of undue influence, federal agencies should require researchers to use the Vulnerability and Equity Impact Assessment tool, which I have created based on the Health Equity Impact Assessment tool, to determine whether minorities and the economically disadvantaged are being unduly influenced into participating in clinical trials in violation of the “respect for persons” principle. (shrink)
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Using Health Justice to Achieve Racial Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion in Bioethics.Ruqaiijah Yearby -2024 -American Journal of Bioethics 24 (10):20-23.detailsVolume 24, Issue 10, October 2024, Page 20-23.
INTRODUCTION: What is Health Justice?Lindsay F. Wiley,Ruqaiijah Yearby,Brietta R. Clark &Seema Mohapatra -2022 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 50 (4):636-640.detailsHealth justice is both a community-led movement for power building and transformational change and a community-oriented framework for health law scholarship. Health justice is distinguished by a distinctively social ethic of care that reframes the relationship between health care, public health, and the social determinants of health, and names subordination as the root cause of health inequities.