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Browsing by Author "Peek, Monica E."
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Item COVID-19 Among African Americans: An Action Plan for Mitigating Disparities(American Public Health Association, 2021-02) Peek, Monica E.; Simons, Russell A.; Parker, William F.; Ansell, David A.; Rogers, Selwyn O.; Tucker Edmonds, Brownsyne; Obstetrics and Gynecology, School of MedicineAs the COVID-19 pandemic has unfolded across the United States, troubling disparities in mortality have emerged between different racial groups, particularly African Americans and Whites. Media reports, a growing body of COVID-19-related literature, and long-standing knowledge of structural racism and its myriad effects on the African American community provide important lenses for understanding and addressing these disparities.However, troubling gaps in knowledge remain, as does a need to act. Using the best available evidence, we present risk- and place-based recommendations for how to effectively address these disparities in the areas of data collection, COVID-19 exposure and testing, health systems collaboration, human capital repurposing, and scarce resource allocation.Our recommendations are supported by an analysis of relevant bioethical principles and public health practices. Additionally, we provide information on the efforts of Chicago, Illinois' mayoral Racial Equity Rapid Response Team to reduce these disparities in a major urban US setting.Item Potential Unintended Consequences Of Recent Shared Decision Making Policy Initiatives(Project HOPE, 2019-11) Blumenthal-Barby, Jennifer; Opel, Douglas J.; Dickert, Neal W.; Kramer, Daniel B.; Tucker Edmonds, Brownsyne; Ladin, Keren; Peek, Monica E.; Peppercorn, Jeff; Tilburt, Jon; Obstetrics and Gynecology, School of MedicineShared decision making (SDM)-when clinicians and patients make medical decisions together-is moving swiftly from an ethical ideal toward widespread clinical implementation affecting millions of patients through recent policy initiatives. We argue that policy initiatives to promote SDM implementation in clinical practice carry the risk of several unintended negative consequences if limitations in defining and measuring SDM are not addressed. We urge policy makers to include prespecified definitions of desired outcomes, offer guidance on the tools used to measure SDM in the multitude of contexts in which it occurs, evaluate the impact of SDM policy initiatives over time, review that impact at regular intervals, and revise SDM measurement tools as needed.