At a recent panel discussion, 果酱视频 faculty and experts alike discussed the differences in health care between regions of New York.
by Patrick Granata, M.F.A. ’16
How is one鈥檚 street address a good indicator of health? What happens to a person鈥檚 health when he or she lives in one neighborhood rather than another? Tonya Samuel, Ed.D., assistant professor in the , and Todd Vanidestine, Ph.D., assistant professor in the , raised the important issue during their April 7 Master of Public Health panel discussion.
The panel鈥攈eadlined 鈥淯nnatural Causes鈥s Inequality Making Us Sick?鈥濃攆ollowed a showing of Place Matters. The documentary showed that the social conditions in which people are born, live and work every day, according to their economic situation, are the biggest determinants of their health, rather than a person鈥檚 behavior and habits.
Individuals鈥 choices are often limited by the place in which they live, so those in more upscale neighborhoods are far less likely to be hospitalized and suffer diseases鈥攕uch as heart disease, cancer, diabetes and asthma鈥攖han those living in low-income neighborhoods.听

Bringing the conversation home, Nassau County currently ranks an impressive second among 62 total counties in the State of New York on the 2016 听list. However, even within one of the state鈥檚 healthiest counties, there are significant health disparities in lower-income neighborhoods within Nassau. For instance, Dr. Samuel explained that people in Elmont, Roosevelt, Long Beach, Freeport, Uniondale, Westbury, Glen Cove and Hempstead have considerably higher rates of elevated lead levels, type 2 diabetes, liver disease, asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease than people living anywhere else in the county.
What is significant about those neighborhoods is that they are all lower income, and mostly African American and Hispanic population centers. On the other hand, the neighborhoods reporting healthier statistics are mostly higher-income, white neighborhoods. The rate of hospitalization is also more than double in low-income, predominantly minority communities than anywhere else on Long Island.
鈥淚s this a case of race or place?鈥 Dr. Samuel asked. 鈥淭he real question is whether government policies contribute to the racialization of place and invariably enforce social hierarchies of its inhabitants, which can affect health.鈥
Dr. Samuel not only raised the question of how housing policies and racial housing segregation might play a role but also brought up how those factors are stigmatized in how people think and converse about the issue.
鈥淲e can see that place is melded with racial characteristics,鈥 Dr. Samuel said. 鈥淓ven when somebody describes living in an 鈥榰rban environment,鈥 or 鈥榠nner city health,鈥 people get a picture of what is 鈥榰rban鈥 and 鈥榗ity health鈥 or 鈥榗ity living,鈥 and it鈥檚 a picture of loud, poor, black, fast鈥攈ence maybe poor health. If one says, 鈥榃hat is the look of suburban health?鈥 you get white, settled, quiet鈥攈ence good health.鈥
Place Matters was originally created in 2002 to focus on public health department policy relating to health in inner cities having some of the higher health disparities across the nation. Looking at ways to alleviate the national problem, Dr. Vanidestine discussed the importance and need for civil health departments, community activists and politicians to work together to provide solutions for the people most affected.
Dr. Vanidestine pointed out that the way in which the School of Social Work and the College of Nursing and Public Health came together in bringing awareness of the troubling issue to the 果酱视频 community, is exactly the kind of transdisciplinary collaboration needed between social workers and public health officials to ultimately solve one of the biggest social problems facing contemporary American society.
鈥淲e need to come together now and collaborate in order to be more effective,鈥 he added.
The Master of Public Health听panel discussion鈥攈eld at the Center for Recreation and Sports in conjunction with National Public Health Week鈥攚as moderated by M. Pilar Martin, M.D., director of the College鈥檚 M.P.H. program.
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director听
p 鈥 516.237.8634
e 鈥 twilson@adelphi.edu