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Racism: Incarceration of a Household Member and Hispanic Health Disparities

2023-04-23 03:27:01

Many Americans pretend to be far behind in the era of racial discrimination, but it is clear that there are institutional racial discrimination in this country yet. One way to comply with this system of racial discrimination is to focus on our prison system and how the imprisonment rate is biased toward African Americans. The reason for the difference in the imprisonment rate is controversial, it varies depending on race, but it is the point of history and it is beginning to show the reason for the beginning of the difference. Imprisoned families and children may be imprisoned against discrimination, discrimination against African American students, and compared with white students.

Ethnic differences in criminal justice are explained in three ways. Discriminatory participation, personal racial discrimination, and institutional race discrimination. First, African Americans and Hispanics have different crimes - they commit more crimes. Their criminal activity is related to the fact that these groups suffer from poverty and unemployment. Second, some of the contradictions are due to individual police, prosecutors, defense attorneys, judges, probation officers, parole officers and members of the parole committee. This personal race discrimination includes prejudice and discrimination against black criminals and other ethnic minority members by individual criminal justice authorities. Third, some of the differences may be due to institutional racial discrimination. This racial discrimination occurs as long as there are regulations, classifications, and practices that "different (not equal) impact" ethnic minorities.

Racial discrimination has created barriers to independence and medical independence. Despite serious health differences, individuals do not have equal access to high-quality medical ethnically ethnically. In order to understand the influence of racism on health and health, there must be a well-developed knowledge base. The country that has the most extensive knowledge system related to racial discrimination and medical treatment is the United States. In the United States, Caucasians are three times more likely to undergo bypass surgery than non white people. Patients other than Caucasians seeking to attend a special nursing home for the elderly had a longer delay before hospitalization than with white patients. In the case of Hispanic women, doctors are less likely to recommend breast cancer screening than white women. Pneumonia patients other than white people receive fewer hospital services than white patients. Finally, the average population of poor urban blacks and Hispanic communities is 24 per 100,000 people, while the population of white poor communities is 69 per 100,000 people.