Chapter 10: Health Inequalities, Environmental Racism, and Environmental Justice
Nuremburg code
set of principles outlining how to ethically carry out research experiments as a result of the nuremberg trials after world war II
Food deserts
urban and rural low-income areas with limited access to affordable and nutritious foods
Environmental justice
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies."
Cumulative disadvantage perspective
Tendency of prior social problems to produce future ones that accumulate and undermine success
Environmental racism
The deliberate placement of polluting industries or activities in minority areas because those communities are less able or likely to fight the polluters
Weathering hypothesis
The idea that there is stress that comes with living in a race-conscious society and this causes disproportionate physiological deterioration
Hispanic Paradox
The surprising notion that, although low socioeconomic status (SES) usually correlates with poor health, this is not true for Hispanics in the United States. For example, when compared with the U.S. average low birth-weight (LBW) rate, Hispanic newborns are less often of low birth-weight
Tuskegee Syphilis study
medical equipment deliberately withheld to observe the effects on poor/black men; men were coerced, given syphilis, treated for "bad blood," under US Public Health Service; Legacy Committee for Bill Clinton to apologize publicly and redress the damages
Life-course perspective
socioeconomic disadvantages originating in childhood accumulate over the life course to especially disadvantage health in old age