Content Deep Dive
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School
National University College *
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Course
120
Subject
Health Science
Date
Dec 6, 2023
Type
Pages
3
Uploaded by lopezandrea172
METRO SYE
Content Deep Dive
Assignment Instructions
Purpose:
The Content Deep Dive assignment is designed to deepen your understanding of one of the
issue areas listed below in relation to health equity. This deep dive will also prepare you to share
your knowledge of this issue with your classmates as you work together on an upcoming group
project. The content modules are as follows:
Racial Equity
Gender Equity
Class Equity
Immigration Status
Environmental Racism
Task:
Review the materials in your chosen content module and take careful notes about what you are
learning. Reflect on how this information informs what you now know and believe is essential to
understanding this topic and the concepts and communities involved. Then, articulate these
reflections in writing and support them with evidence by using the Content Deep Dive template
on page 2 of this document.
INSTRUCTIONS for COMPLETION
1. In the Content Deep Dive template on page 2:
• Write 2-3 separate statements that express what you believe is essential to understanding this
topic and the concepts and communities involved.
• Provide two quotes from different sources to back up each statement.
2. Type out your responses in 11 or 12 point font (Times, Arial or similar)
3. Cite your sources in APA format.
4. Proofread your responses for spelling and grammar before submitting.
5. Submit your completed page 2 (submission template) to the submission portal on iLearn.
METRO SYE
Name:
Content Deep Dive:
(Submit this part only)
Content Module:
Statement 1: black and latinos have the least affected on health care.
Evidence: Can be given as bullet points. Must include at least two quotations from different
sources.
“Blacks and Hispanics are less likely to have insurance coverage from a private employer,
whether directly or through a spouse, and more likely to have public health insurance coverage
than whites (
Blendon et al., 1989
;
Hogue et al., 2000
;
National Institutes of Health, 1998
).
Blacks and Hispanics are also more likely than whites to receive care in nonoptimal
organizational settings (such as emergency rooms) and to lack continuity in health care. Analyses
of racial and ethnic differences in access to and the use of health services between 1977 and 1996
show that the black-white gap has not narrowed over time, and the gap between Hispanics and
whites has widened (
Weinick et al., 2000
). Moreover, this study found that, even if income and
health insurance coverage were equal, racial and ethnic differences in having a usual source of
care and in receiving ambulatory care in the previous year would not have been eliminated,
because one-half to three-quarters of the differences on these indicators were not accounted for
by income and insurance coverage.”
Bulatao, R. A. (1970, January 1).
Health care
. Understanding Racial and Ethnic Differences in
Health in Late Life: A Research Agenda. Retrieved November 2, 2021, from
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK24693/.
Statement 2:
Health Care Is Di±erent If You're Black, Latino Or Poor
Evidence: Can be given as bullet points. Must include at least two quotations from different
sources.
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