Refiguring "race": epidemiology, racialized biology, and biological expressions of race relations
- PMID: 10707306
- DOI: 10.2190/672J-1PPF-K6QT-9N7U
Refiguring "race": epidemiology, racialized biology, and biological expressions of race relations
Abstract
Given growing appreciation of how race/ethnicity is a social, not biological, construct, some epidemiologists are proposing that studies omit data on "race" and instead collect better socioeconomic data. This suggestion, however, ignores a growing body of evidence on how noneconomic as well as economic aspects of racial discrimination are embodied and harm health across the lifecourse. Developing a critical epidemiology of social inequalities in health will, at the very least, require incorporating thoughtful measures of race/ethnicity and social class in epidemiological studies and public health surveillance systems.
Comment in
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Reply to commentaries by Drs. Krieger and LaVeist on "race in epidemiology".Int J Health Serv. 2000;30(1):221-2. doi: 10.2190/FQVR-W2B1-5MDX-7P7G. Int J Health Serv. 2000. PMID: 10707308
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