The group chosen for this project consists of African American women and one of the major health issues that they face is obesity. African American women who suffer from obesity can range in place and demographic. 56% of African American women are currently obese or overweight (State of Obesity, 2018). The numbers also indicate a stark disparity between whites and blacks regarding obesity: “Nationally, in 2011 to 2012, 20.5 percent of African American girls were obese compared with 15.6 percent of White girls” (State of Obesity, 2018). In many cases, however, class does serve as an indicator of the risk of obesity for many African American women as “lower-incomes and poverty correlate strongly with an increase in obesity, since less nutritious, calorie-dense foods are often less expensive than healthier foods. African American families have earned $1 for every $2 earned by White families for the past 30 years” (State of Obesity, 2018). As a result African American women who suffer from obesity are also at a greater risk of having diabetes, cardiac arrest, heart disease, and other health issues (Banerjee, Herring, Hurley et al., 2018). African American culture is distinct from the other American cultures in the U.S. African Americans have their own cultural...
Their culture is one that infused by a variety of religious backgrounds, from Protestant Christian to Catholic to Muslim. African Americans tend to vote Democrat as this political party has often aimed to represent this class of people in the past; however, with politics in a current state of upheaval since the election of Donald Trump, African Americans are divided as is the rest of the American population.References
Banerjee, E. S., Herring, S. J., Hurley, K. E., Puskarz, K., Yebernetsky, K., & LaNoue, M. (2018). Overcoming obesity: a mixed methods study of the impact of Primary care physician counseling on low-income African American women who successfully lost weight. American Journal of Health Promotion, 32(2), 374-380.
Modell, S., Mathew, E., Greenberg, S. (2015). Status Report: Oncogenomic Testing in the Wake of Health Care Reform. Annals of Public Health and Research, 2(3), 1022.
State of Obesity. (2018). Current status. Retrieved from https://stateofobesity.org/disparities/blacks/
Walcott, F.L., Dunn, B.K., DeSheilds, M., & Baquet, C. (2014). The affordable care act and genetic testing for inheritable cancer syndromes: Impact on high risk underserved minorities. Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, 15, 46-62.
Yanek, L. R., Becker, D. M., Moy, T. F., Gittelsohn, J., & Koffman, D. M. (2016). Project Joy: faith based cardiovascular health promotion for African American women. Public Health Reports, 116(1), 68-81.
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