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Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities

 

 

 

Clinical Programs
Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities

 


Victor Dzau, MD, Chief, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and members of the DSMHI organizing committee.


Poverty, racism gender inequality and violence lead to profoundly unequal distribution of pathologies and inequalities in access to medical care. Although laboratory research has produced advances in modern medicine, these advances have benefited just a small percentage of the world's population. In the U.S., racial and class disparities pose significant public health problems. Health disparities are far greater in poor countries where infectious disease and violence remain leading causes of premature death. At the same time, health policies serve as important determinants of access to quality care and of differential disease burden.

The newly created Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities is a collaborative effort of the Department of Social Medicine and the Brigham and Women's Hospital. The Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities seeks to bring insights from the social sciences relevant to medicine to an academic medical center and thereby improve medical care. Medical anthropology, history, sociology, epidemiology, statistics and economics will inform the Division's work.

The primary activity of the Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities will be directed toward fostering and coordinating efforts in training, research and service, to reduce disparities in disease burden and to improve treatment outcomes both at home and abroad. The program will focus on infections such as HIV and tuberculosis, and non- infectious disease, including coronary artery disease, diabetes and addiction, as well as other problems of major import to society and of interest to Brigham and Women's Hospital researchers and trainees.

The Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities will seek to respond to the growing interest among medical students and recent graduates in health disparities research as well as to their commitment to underserved populations. The Division will place trainees in ongoing health disparities research efforts and foster collaborations between trainees and faculty, including extramural faculty.


 

 

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