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Health Equity Summit set June 29 in Dove

Register by June 22
June 19, 2017

Factors such as where people live, how much they earn and their social connections may have an adverse impact on their personal health. In an effort to address and eliminate such disparities among people statewide, the Division of Public Health will present its annual Health Equity Summit from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Thursday, June 29, at Delaware State University's Martin Luther King Student Center in Dover.

Health equity is the absence of systematic disparities in health (or in the major determinants of health) between social groups that have different levels of underlying social advantages and disadvantages. Health inequities are differences that are not only unnecessary and avoidable but also are considered unfair and unjust.

"One of my priorities as secretary is to increase our conversations about the social-cultural context issues that impact everyone's health," said Department of Health and Social Services Secretary Dr. Kara Odom Walker, a board-certified family physician. "It is imperative that we understand the impact that social determinants have on our vulnerable minority populations as we help develop plans of care for them. To achieve health equity and to eliminate health disparities within the fabric of Delaware's healthcare system, we need a multipronged strategy that includes a diverse workforce and attention throughout our healthcare system and society."

"It's vitally important that we work to make sure everyone has the same opportunities to have access to the things they need to make them healthy regardless of age, race, income, address, sexual orientation or underlying health conditions," said Division of Public Health Director Dr. Karyl Rattay. "This summit will give Delawareans the chance to become better informed and address many of the health inequities we face as a state."

The theme of this year's summit is Bridging Health Equity Across Communities. The event will bring together local experts from various backgrounds addressing the importance of health, healthy neighborhoods, a progressive plan for health, and the impact of opioid and heroin abuse on communities. It includes breakout sessions on Healthy Neighborhoods, Opioid and Heroin Abuse, Plan 4 Health and more. The summit is sponsored by the DPH Bureau of Health Equity.

Certain populations continue to lag behind others in many health outcomes. People in those populations are less likely to get the preventive care they need to stay healthy, more likely to suffer from serious illnesses such as diabetes or heart disease, and when they do get sick, are less likely to have access to quality healthcare. Health disparities among these populations are often linked to social, economic or environmental disadvantages, such as lack of access to good jobs, unsafe neighborhoods and lack of affordable transportation options. These conditions are known as the social determinants of health.

Partners, community representatives and individual citizens from across the state are invited to attend the summit to learn about inequities in health and how they are being addressed. A community's ability to develop public health policy solutions tailored for its needs and priorities is an essential part of achieving health equity. Policies to address health inequities are more likely to succeed when they come from and are supported by the communities they are meant to serve.

There is no cost to attend the summit. To register by Thursday, June 22, go to www.surveymonkey.com/r/RNXJYNF or call Elizabeth Daniels or Karen McGloughlin at 302-744-4703.

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