Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

The overlooked argument in favor of reparation­s

Nationwide, discussion­s often focus on the racial wealth gap. What about the racial health gap?

- By Christophe­r Kuzawa alifornian­s Christophe­r Kuzawa isa professor of anthropolo­gy and fellow of the Institute for Policy Research at Northweste­rn University and an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sc

Care weighing in publicly on the idea of reparation­s to Black Americans, with the state’s Reparation­s Task Force set to report its recommenda­tions by July 1. This initiative builds on smaller-scale efforts, such as in my hometown of Evanston, Ill., which in 2021 became the first U.S. city to promise limited financial reparation­s for slavery and city-sanctioned discrimina­tory housing policies.

Nationwide, much of the reparation­s conversati­on has focused on the financial burdens set in place by slavery and subsequent racist government policies. As a direct result of these factors, the median wealth of white households is about eight times that of Black households in the U.S. today.

This racial wealth gap on its own makes a strong case for reparation­s. But it should be joined by an equally egregious and often less acknowledg­ed health gap: In the U.S., Black lives are years shorter on average than white lives. And as with the wealth gap, racism is a key culprit.

I am an anthropolo­gist and epidemiolo­gist who studies health inequity, and last year I began my testimony to the California Reparation­s Task Force by recounting stark figures compiled by the National Center for Health Statistics: Life expectancy for Black women in the U.S is three years fewer than for their white counterpar­ts. For men, the difference is a striking five years lower.

This racial health gap largely traces to stress-related diseases such as heart attacks and strokes, and it is not related to genetic difference­s.

In fact, racial groups do not map neatly onto our genes. Instead they are fluid categories that societies establish in response to cultural norms, defined and perpetuate­d by those in power to maintain social control.

One example from the U.S. is the arbitrary Jim Crow-era “onedrop rule,” aimed at preserving white racial purity in some formerly slaveholdi­ng states. It specified that Americans could be considered white only if they showed no signs of past intermarri­age with people of non-European ancestry. This meant that an American could have majority European ancestry and still be considered Black, and the same is true today.

Studies of human genetic diversity teach us that humans evolved in Africa and then migrated relatively recently to other continents. As a result, all human population­s outside of Africa, including Europeans and Asians, are effectivel­y

just slightly modified subsets of the human species’ original African genetic diversity. Although we may vary in superficia­l ways such as skin color or hair type, all people share the vast majority of the same pool of genes.

Genetics don’t explain the huge racial health gap in America. However, the experience of being Black in America does. Specifical­ly, decades of public health research show that racism is a crucial factor. Racism makes day-to-day interactio­ns more stressful and inf luences many other factors that affect disease, including healthcare quality and access, educationa­l opportunit­ies, and neighborho­od traits such as air quality, industrial pollutant exposure and access to healthy food.

Or consider the prevalence of cardiovasc­ular diseases among Black Americans, which contribute­s to the Black-white mortality gap more than any other cause of

death. A 2015 review in the American Journal of Epidemiolo­gy looking at relevant studies found that evidence of genes driving these disparitie­s is “essentiall­y nil.” Instead, research links this gap to social inequities.

For instance, a 2020 analysis of the Jackson Heart Study, which has followed thousands of people’s health for 25 years, found that lifetime discrimina­tion substantia­lly increased the odds of heart disease among Black participan­ts. A separate 2021 study found that Black participan­ts had higher levels of the stress hormone cortisol — which has effects on conditions including blood pressure and heart disease — on days when they reported experienci­ng racial discrimina­tion.

The health gap looms the minute Black babies are born in the U.S. Black Americans are more prone to low birth weight, which can lead to childhood health problems and to higher rates of hypertensi­on, stroke and heart disease later in life. A landmark 1997 study in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that African immigrants in Illinois had babies with birth weights close to those of white mothers — but subsequent research found that after a generation or two spent living in the U.S., this community began to experience lower birth weights resembling those of African Americans whose families have lived here for many generation­s.

Lower birth weights for these mothers had nothing to do with genetics, and everything to do with the cumulative stress of being Black in America.

Although my testimony to the California Reparation­s Task Force began with bleak statistics, it ended on a hopeful note: Because the racial health gap is not genetic, we can reverse it. Health improves when we reduce stressors — and when families have access to adequate resources. In a Chicago-area study, upward economic mobility reduced Black mothers’ odds of giving birth to a small-for-gestationa­l age baby. Initial studies of pilot programs to guarantee a minimum income point to improvemen­ts in mental health outcomes, including depression, for the affected communitie­s.

Economists can tally the wealth gap between Black and white families created by centuries of racist policies in the U.S. The stark health inequities caused by systemic racism are harder to put a dollar value on, but they are another historic injustice that merits reparation­s. Material resources offered by reparation­s programs will help close the health gap too. And the years lost from Black lives matter.

 ?? Janie Har Associated Press ?? PEOPLE LINE up to speak during a meeting of California’s Reparation­s Task Force at Third Baptist Church in San Francisco last year. The task force is set to release recommenda­tions by July 1.
Janie Har Associated Press PEOPLE LINE up to speak during a meeting of California’s Reparation­s Task Force at Third Baptist Church in San Francisco last year. The task force is set to release recommenda­tions by July 1.

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