African Americans remain disparately impacted by chronic
diseases. However, no matter how you “slice the pie” African American (AA) men
suffer disproportionately higher mortality rates than their female and Caucasian
male counterparts for almost every disease. In general, men tend to experience
higher disease burden than females. In fact, Harvard Medical School reports
that in eight out of 10 leading causes of death, the death rate is higher for
men than women, and higher for AA men than other men. For example, the heart
disease death rate for African American males is 2 times greater than that of their
male Caucasian peers. Simply being African American is a risk factor for
Prostate cancer-whereby AA men are nearly 2.5 times more likely to die from
prostate cancer than their Caucasian counterparts. Research notes that there
are many contributing factors for these disturbing health outcomes ranging from
macro (socio-ecological) to micro (individual health beliefs/behaviors) level
factors. The good news is that more and more attention is being given to
gender-specific health care; the “not-so-good” news is that much more attention
is needed to scratch the surface on understanding the complexities of African
American men’s health.
February is African American history month and American
Heath month and because heart disease remains the leading cause of death among
AA men, Health Promotion Council (HPC) would like to empower AA men to “Take
Control” by doing the following:
•Schedule an annual physical exam
o
An annual checkup also gives men the opportunity
to talk with their doctor about any concerns.
•Adopt a healthy diet
o
Keeping trim is important for heart health, but
many men skip meals, snack during the day, eat a big meal loaded with fat and
calories at night, and, not surprisingly, gain weight.
•Engage in physical activity
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Physical inactivity is a risk factor for heart
disease, thirty minutes a day, five days a week, at a pace vigorous enough to
increase heart rate and break a sweat.
•Practice stress reduction
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Explore stress-reducing techniques such as deep
breathing, relaxation exercises, meditation, and massage.
•Get to know your history
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Knowing your family’s medical history will allow
you to alert your doctor of any genetic chronic conditions that run in your
family, so that your health care provider can keep an eye on your health status
and run the necessary tests to keep you healthy.
For almost a decade HPC has worked with the community to
improve men’s health. Just to name a
couple of successful initiatives: 1) SHAPE-IT, this program focused Stroke,
Hypertension and Prostate issues that African American men face; and 2) the
Black Men in Hypertension and Diabetes (HD), which is a research project that
concentrated on developing resource materials for African American men who had
a diagnosis of Hypertension and/or diabetes to help them become better informed
about living with these chronic conditions. Our goal is simple: educate and
empower but our belief is simpler“An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of
cure”.
Thank you for keeping us up-to-date on the disparities that continue in African American men. It is an incredibly important issue that we need to keep doing our best to change the statistics. Hopefully, we are starting to move in the right direction.
ReplyDeleteI am curious about the data out there and how long these terrible trends fave existed for AA men. I hope that the data in another 10 years will show impact from your efforts and others doing same work. Thank you!
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