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PAHO study finds Afro-descendants in Latin America live in ‘starkly unequal conditions’ that impact health, well-being
Director of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), Dr Carissa F Etienne
Latest News
December 4, 2021

PAHO study finds Afro-descendants in Latin America live in ‘starkly unequal conditions’ that impact health, well-being

WASHINGTON, United States (CMC) – The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) says  a new study of Afro-descendant populations in 18 Latin American countries demonstrates that they live with “dramatically unequal social and economic conditions that damage health.” 

The study, “Health of Afro-descendant People in Latin America,” concludes that, in more than 80 per cent of the 18 countries analysed, Afro-descendants live with “a broad range of disadvantages related to poverty, employment, maternal and child health, and lack of access to adequate ­housing and basic services, such as safe water and sanitation.” 

“Let us be frank: health inequities faced by Afro-descendant people occur in a context of discrimination and institutional racism, often exacerbated by gender inequalities,” said PAHO Dominican-born Director, Dr Carissa Etienne, in releasing the study on Friday.

“They are manifested from the first years of life, and accumulated health risks increase with age, producing significant differences in the levels of mortality and life expectancy,” she added.

“As a result, different factors related to discrimination and stigmatisation, along with gender inequalities and social and economic disadvantages, account for the poor health outcomes of Afro-descendant people.

“As we have noted before,” Dr Etienne continued, “the profound inequities in health faced by these communities have been further exposed and exacerbated by the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic in both its direct and indirect effects.” 

The report, which analyses data on socio-economic indicators in the 18 countries, emphasises that limited access to health care for Afro-descendant people also translates into “high maternal mortality rates, early pregnancy, and epidemiological profiles in which sickle cell disease, chronic diseases, such as diabetes and hypertension, and HIV prevail.” 

PAHO said that, in Latin America, 134 million people identify themselves as Afro-descendants. 

The report finds that, in many countries, disadvantages are stark. For example, it finds that, in Ecuador, the maternal mortality rate for Afro-descendant women triples the overall maternal mortality rate. 

In Colombia, the rate for Afro-descendant women is 1.8 times higher, and in Brazil, it is 36 per cent higher, the study finds. 

In Uruguay, the proportion of Afro-descendants with limited access to drinking water (42 per cent) is almost double that of non-Afro-descendants (24 per cent), according to the report. 

In urban areas in Nicaragua, it says 81 per cent of Afro-descendants have limited access to water, compared to 35 per cent of non-Afro-descendants.  

“We are living in a context of systemic racism against Afro-descendants,” said Costa Rican First Vice President, Espy Campbell Barr, during the launch event.

“By systemic, I mean that it is enclosed within the political, economic, social and cultural system and that, as a result, health is incorporated in that reality of racial exclusion of Afro-descendant people and, of course, indigenous peoples.” 

La Celia A Prince, the Vincentian-born Chief of Staff of the Assistant Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), said: “While people in situations of vulnerability such as Afro-descendants still face invisibility and exclusion, while they still live in poverty and are not able to access universal health coverage, the achievement of the (United Nations) Sustainable Development Goals will remain out of our reach. 

“For this reason, we join the call to action and inclusivity for vulnerable Afro-descendant populations,” said Prince, a former St Vincent and the Grenadines Ambassador to the United States and the OAS. 

The report recommends improving public health policies for Afro-descendants by incorporating “specific knowledge and ancestral practices of Afro-descendant people, respect for their autonomy, culture and customs, and the creation of participatory scenarios conducive to equal opportunities for all.

“These are urgent issues that cannot be put off if the aim is to ensure equitable and inclusive processes that guarantee the right to health for all Afro-descendant people,” the report said.

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