An Overview of Disparities and Improving the Collection of Race, Ethnicity, and Language Data: the MDPH Approach NAPHSIS ANNUAL MEETING, 2007 Bruce B.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A Brief Narrated Tutorial August 2013 Reporting Race and Ethnicity to the NIH for Clinical Research.
Advertisements

Minority Fellowship Program: Challenges and Opportunities Under Healthcare Reform Miriam E. Delphin-Rittmon, Ph.D MFP 40 th Anniversary Celebration and.
National Congress of American Indians Data Matters Tribal Sovereignty & the Measurement of Small Populations Dr. Malia Villegas, Director NCAI Policy Research.
Race Definitions Office of Management and Budget (OMB) American Indian or Alaska Native: A person having origins in any of the original peoples of North.
National Center for Health Statistics DCC CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION Changes in Race Differentials: The Impact of the New OMB Standards.
Principles of Epidemiology
Advising the Nation. Improving Health. Subcommittee on Standardized Collection of Race/Ethnicity Data for Healthcare Quality Improvement Presentation to.
Federal Committee on Statistical Methodology Policy Seminar December 5, 2012 Washington, DC With thanks to Jennifer Madans, Associate Director for Science,
CANS Application May 20, 2011 Ed K.S. Wang, Psy.D.
Alcohol use and binge drinking among Hispanic/Latino subculture youth, and the differences in the affect of acculturation Hal Johnson, MPH Florida Substance.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Health Statistics Division of Vital Statistics.
New Standards for Collecting and Reporting Students′ Race and Ethnicity Data Information for Parents July 2009.
Results from the 2010 Census Race and Hispanic Origin Alternative Questionnaire Experiment Nicholas Jones  Roberto Ramirez U.S. Census Bureau Presentation.
The National Ethnic Politics Study (NEPS): Ethnic Pluralism & Politics in the 21 st Century May 12, 2005 Vincent L. Hutchings, Cara J. Wong, Ron E. Brown,
The National Politics Study (NPS): Ethnic Pluralism & Politics in the 21 st Century Study Overview.
Health Disparities in MA Council for the Elimination of Racial and Ethnic Disparities.
Ernest Moy Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
REVIEW OF VITAL STATISTICS Brady E. Hamilton, Ph.D. Reproductive Statistics Branch and Elizabeth Arias, Ph.D. Mortality Statistics Branch Division of Vital.
Data Sets and Outcome Measures Principles of Epidemiology Lecture 2 Dona Schneider, PhD, MPH, FACE.
The Health Status of American Indians/Native Americans in Massachusetts Massachusetts Department of Public Health Center for Health Information, Statistics,
Comparing Race and Ethnicity as Reported on Infant Death and Matching Live Birth Certificates, North Carolina Paul A. Buescher, Ph.D. State Center.
Tools for Registration Reporting Race, Ethnicity and Language: A Guide to Helping Patients.
1 Concepts and Measures of Race and Ethnicity: Glimpses from the UW-BHS Charles Hirschman & Anthony Daniel Perez CSDE Seminar October 19, 2007.
Ethnicity Data Challenge Beth Smith, Chair, Equity and Diversity Action Committee David Clay, Cañada College Jesse Ortiz, Woodland Community College.
1 1 Nuts and Bolts of Collecting Patient Race, Ethnicity and Language Data Staff Training [Your hospital name] [Date]
Collection of Race, Ethnicity, and Language Preference Data in a Complex Healthcare Organization Brian Currie, MD, MPH Montefiore Medical Center Bronx,
G uidance on the Collection of Race and Ethnicity Data by Ambulance Services Bruce Cohen, Sylvia Hobbs, James West, Georgia Simpson-May Massachusetts Department.
Changes to Meditech Registration A Guide for Data Collection Adapted Training Slides from the Cambridge Health Alliance.
2014 Applied Demography Conference Reporting of Race Among Hispanics: Analysis of ACS Data Howard Hogan, Ph.D. Chief Demographer US Census Thursday, January.
HHS Data Enhancements to Monitor Implementation and Impact of Health Reform Jim Scanlon Deputy Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation.
National Prevention Strategy 1. National Prevention Council Bureau of Indian AffairsDepartment of Labor Corporation for National and Community Service.
Advocating for Cultural and Linguistic Access: Policy Issues Martin Martinez, MPP Policy Director California Medicare Coalition, February 2008.
The Use of Indirect Race and Ethnicity Data in Reducing Health Disparities: A Healthplan Model Diversity Rx October 20, 2010 Peggy Payne, MA, CDE CIGNA.
Data on: Race and Hispanic Origin Data on: Race and Hispanic Origin Census 2000:
1 Sex/Gender and Minority Inclusion in NIH Clinical Research What Investigators Need to Know! Presenter: Miriam F. Kelty, PhD, National Institute on Aging,
Hospital Discharge Data and Vermont Health Surveillance Charles Bennett, Ph.D. Epidemiological Surveillance Chief Vermont Explor, Hospital Data Managers.
I Caceres and B Cohen Division of Research and Epidemiology Bureau of Health Information, Statistics, Research and Evaluation Massachusetts Department.
HHS Data Standards for Race, Ethnicity, Sex, Primary Language and Disability Status Rashida Dorsey, PhD, MPH Department of Health and Human Services Office.
The impact of health care reform on minority populations The Massachusetts Health Disparities Council April 27, 2009.
Continuity of Change: Where We Have Come From, Where We Are Going New Orleans, LA June 5 th – June 9 th, 2011 Bruce Cohen, Malena Hood, and James K. West.
Massachusetts Health Professions Workforce Diversity: Update Executive Office of Health and Human Services.
2006 Federal Depository Library Conference October 23, 2006 Frank Wilmot Electronic Government Information Librarian University of Colorado at Boulder.
1 Projecting Race and Hispanic Origin for the U.S. Population and an Examination of the Impact of Net International Migration David G. Waddington Victoria.
Standardizing Patient Race, Ethnicity and Language Data Collection: Overview October 1, 2010 Memphis, TN Aligning Forces for Quality National Program Office.
Implications of the new federal requirements for schools. July 2009 Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
1MIS 2008 / Guidance on Racial and Ethnic Data Implementation of the Final Guidance on Collecting and Reporting Racial and Ethnic Data February 27, 2008.
Methodological Challenges in Developing the National Health Care Quality and Health Care Disparities Reports Julia Holmes NCHS 2004 NCHS Data User’s Conference.
Case Study in the Construction of Race: U.S. Census.
Reducing Occupational Health Disparities in Massachusetts: From Data to Action Letitia Davis, ScD, Kerry Souza, MPH Occupational Health Surveillance Program.
Births and Birth Outcomes for Single- and Multiple-Race American Indian and Alaskan Native Mothers Brady E. Hamilton, Ph.D. National Center for Health.
GaETC 2008: Keys to Continuous Improvement New Reporting Requirements for Race and Ethnicity Effective Levette Williams, GaDOE November, 2008.
Massachusetts Births 2005 Center for Health Information, Statistics, Research, and Evaluation Division of Research and Epidemiology Registry of Vital Records.
June 3, 2015 ADVANCING HEALTH EQUITY. HOW DO YOU IDENTIFY YOURSELF?
STANDARD 4 & DIVERSITY in the NCATE Standards Boyce C. Williams, NCATE John M. Johnston, University of Memphis Institutional Orientation, Spring 2008.
U.S. Department of Commerce Economics and Statistics Administration U.S. Census Bureau Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin: 2010 March 2011.
The U.S. Census Bureau’s Postcensal and Intercensal Population Estimates Alexa Jones-Puthoff Population Division National Conference on Health Statistics.
How people react to others AND How those reactions impact society
Census 2000 Is person Spanish/Hispanic/Latino? No Mexican, Mexican American, Chicano Puerto Rican Cuban Other Spanish/Hispanic/Latino What is person’s.
ETHNICITIES CHAPTER 7 | p Feb 17 – 27.
Healthy People 2010 Focus Area 5: Diabetes Progress Review October 20, 2006.
Issues in the Classification of Race and Ethnicity Data Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Health Statistics.
1 The Census as History and History of the Census: What It’s Good For and What It’s Not Margo Anderson University of Wisconsin -- Milwaukee.
Changes to Meditech Registration A Guide for Data Collection Adapted Training Slides from the Cambridge Health Alliance.
Race and Ethnicity Data What do we have and how do we use it? Lou Saadi, Ph.D. Director, Office of Health Assessment Center for Health and Environmental.
CENSUS 2000 DATA ON RACE, HISPANIC ORIGIN, AND ANCESTRY Nancy M. Gordon Associate Director for Demographic Programs U.S. Census Bureau March 2001.
Bruce B. Cohen, PhD Massachusetts Department of Public Health
Race Definitions OMB American Indian or Alaska Native: A person having origins in any of the original peoples of North and South America (including Central.
Engagement Survey Results: Demographics
Why Change 4-H Reporting?
New Reporting Requirements for Race and Ethnicity Effective
Presentation transcript:

An Overview of Disparities and Improving the Collection of Race, Ethnicity, and Language Data: the MDPH Approach NAPHSIS ANNUAL MEETING, 2007 Bruce B. Cohen and Brunilda Torres Massachusetts Department of Public Health June 2007

Overview: Improving Data Collection Historical Context History of MDPH efforts Need for more detailed data Defining principles Proposed questions

Historical Context

OMB Standards Office of Management and Budget Directive 15 issued in 1977 set standards revised in 1997 sets minimum standards for the collection of race and ethnicity data for all federal data sets all current surveys should have complied with the 1997 revision by January 1, 2003

OMB 1997 revision Major changes –when self identification is used, a method for reporting more than one race should be adopted –this method should NOT be a “multiracial” category, but rather a multiple response to a single question a two question format should be used, with the Hispanic origin question preceding the race question

OMB 1997 revision Major changes (continued) –when self identification is NOT used (ie. observer, proxy or record based) a method for reporting more than one race should be adopted –this method should NOT be a “multiracial” category, but rather a multiple response to a single question a two question format should be used, with the Hispanic origin question preceding the race question a one question format may be used, with “Hispanic” as a race category

OMB Revised Race Categories 1997 –white –black or African American –American Indian or Alaska Native –Asian –Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander NOTE: Only the US Census Bureau for the purpose of the Census 2000 and NCHS for the revised standard certificates of birth and death have been granted variances to include an “other” category 1977 –white –black –American Indian –Asian or Pacific Islander

Census 2000: Ethnicity Question (ADOPTED by NCHS in Revised Certificate) Is person 1 Spanish/Hispanic/Latino? Mark x in the “No” box if not Spanish/Hispanic/Latino. –No, not Spanish/Hispanic/Latino –Yes, Mexican, Mexican Am., Chicano –Yes, Puerto Rican –Yes, Cuban –Yes, other Spanish/Hispanic Latino- print group.

Census 2000: Race question Adopted by NCHS What is Person 1’s race? Mark x in one or more races White Black, African American or Negro American Indian or Alaskan Native- print name of enrolled or principal tribe Asian IndianNative Hawaiian ChineseGuamanian or Chamorro FilipinoSamoan JapaneseOther Pacific Islander- print race KoreanSome other race- print race Vietnamese Other Asian- print race

OMB 15 in historical context Lessons for states in implementing OMB 15 –race categories changed regularly over time –race categories determined by social and cultural context –race categories will continue to be determined by and reflect social and cultural context –ethnicity and national origin categories more stable over time change to reflect changing demographics, not social and cultural context highly salient to state and local public health practice OMB in Historical Context

Purpose of data collection –state and federal similar: ongoing monitoring to identify priorities, program evaluation, and high need areas –state and federal differ: state needs for service targeting to high risk individuals state needs for service targeting to high risk communities Impact of OMB and Federal and State Public Health Practice

History of Massachusetts Efforts

DPH efforts to date ’s: Special reports on disparities, e.g.: Black Men Endangered, Disparities Commission testimony, ongoing surveillance reports, detailed ethnicity perinatal reports 2000: Efforts to identify R/E/L methods in MDPH databases 2001: Collection of race/ethnicity and language required in hospital acute care settings as result of Interpreters’ Services Regulations 2002: Internal meetings to develop MDPH standards 2003: MDPH data standards committee review 2005: Collaboration with Boston Public Health Commission for consistent standards 2006: Joined with Division of Health Care Finance and Policy to promulgate case-mix data regulations implement 1/2007 for hospital discharge and emergency department data 2007: February, MDPH issues new standards

Why do we need more detailed information?

Mother’s Race – Births 2004

Mother’s Ancestry – Births 2004

Breastfeeding among Mothers by Race Massachusetts: *Non-Hispanic Source: Massachusetts Births

Breastfeeding among Mothers by Ethnicity, MA: Blacks Hispanics Asians Source: MDPH, Center for Health Information, Statistics, Research & Evaluation, Research & Epidemiology Program

Cesarean Section Deliveries among Mothers by Race, MA: *Non-Hispanic Source: Massachusetts Births

Source: Massachusetts Births 2004 Mother’s Ethnicity and Cesarean Rates All Deliveries* MA 2004 * A delivery of multiples is counted once

Defining Principles

MDPH Proposal Collect Hispanic ancestry and race categories consistent with Federal OMB standards Expand collection to include detailed ethnicity data Collect language data consistent with LEP (Limited English Proficiency) guidance issued by DHSS in 2002

Principles for Data Collection Encourage client self-report Allow for the selection of multiple categories Collect information on detailed ethnicity groups as well as broad race categories Incorporate language preference as basic sociodemographic characteristic Maintain consistency with Federal OMB standards

Basic concepts Race: group or groups that an individual identifies with because they share similar physical characteristics or social and geographic origins. Ethnicity: a person’s background, heritage, culture, ancestry, country of birth

Added Value OF RACE monitors discrimination, yields more stable rates Follows OMB standard more routinely collected OF ETHNICITY better understood less context dependent more useful for program targeting and development improved sensitivity to linguistic needs added insight into acculturation

Concerns WITH RACE changing over time not clearly understood conceptually context dependent heterogeneity within groups used as proxy WITH ETHNICITY lack of denominators for population based rates small numbers for analysis requires more complex data collection more variable by geography

Collecting Both Advantages client centered care target interventions monitor demographic change health status monitoring Disadvantages expanded IT efforts moves beyond Federal minimum standards lack of denominator data for calculating rates increases data collector and respondent burden

Proposed Questions

Proposed New Questions 1.5-Question Format 2.Define a Minimum set of categories 3.Allow for expansion to meet local needs 4.Allows for free text 5.Maintain consistency with Federal standards

Question 1 1. Are you Hispanic/Latino/Spanish? ❑ Yes ❑ No

Question 2

Question 3, Race 3.What is your race? (You can specify one or more) ❑ American Indian/Alaska Native (specify tribal nation___________________) ❑ Asian ❑ Black ❑ Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander (specify) ❑ White ❑ Other (specify ___________________) ❑ Unknown/not specified

Questions 4 and 5: Language Preference 4. In what language do you prefer to discuss health-related concerns? ❑ Albanian ❑ Portuguese ❑ Arabic ❑ Russian ❑ Cape Verdean Creole ❑ Somali ❑ Chinese (specify) ❑ Spanish ❑ English ❑ Vietnamese ❑ Haitian Creole ❑ Other (specify) ❑ Khmer 5. In what language do you prefer to read health-related materials?_____________

Implementation

Keys to successful implementation Making the data collector comfortable Making the respondent comfortable Helping the respondent understand the importance of the information

Field Testing and Training ~ 9000 patients ~1,200 WIC participants Four statewide “Train the Trainer” training sessions for 200 hospital personnel

Current Status DHCFP -- Implementation 1/2007 BPHC --Implementation 7/2007 MDPH – Implementation ongoing Support via BPHC, DHCFP, MHA – Ongoing

Lessons learned Overall, data collectors and program participants feel very favorably about this process. Training of data collectors is crucial: –Purpose and importance of data –Strategies for using new data –Strategies for answering common questions; Need to reach out to our community partners Need to bring IT into this process