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NHSX on Twitter
NHSX on Twitter
The NHS AI Lab and @HealthFdn have awarded £1.4 million to 4 projects to address racial and ethnic health inequalities using artificial Announcement here https://www.nhsx.nhs.uk/news/new-artificial-intelligence-projects-funded-to-tackle-health-inequalities/
tgyateng69·twitter.com·
NHSX on Twitter
A Drug Addiction Risk Algorithm and Its Grim Toll on Chronic Pain Sufferers
A Drug Addiction Risk Algorithm and Its Grim Toll on Chronic Pain Sufferers
A sweeping AI has become central to how the US handles the opioid crisis. It may only be making the crisis worse. With the creeping privatisation of our National Health Services, could the U.K. see similar opaque algorithms creating barriers here?
·wired.com·
A Drug Addiction Risk Algorithm and Its Grim Toll on Chronic Pain Sufferers
Pulse oximetry racial bias report
Pulse oximetry racial bias report
There is a growing body of evidence, however, that pulse oximetry is less accurate in darker skinned patients. Given the increased mortality amongst ethnic minority patients during the Covid-19 pandemic, it is possible that the differential accuracy of pulse oximetry is a contributing factor to this health inequality
tgyateng69·nhsconfed.org·
Pulse oximetry racial bias report
Black African migrants: the barriers with accessing and utilizing health promotion services in the UK
Black African migrants: the barriers with accessing and utilizing health promotion services in the UK
The inequalities for different ethnicities and social classes in accessing health services is well documented, but although a number of recent policy developments have aimed to tackle health inequalities, very little is known about the experiences of Black African migrant communities in accessing health promotion information and services. The aim of the study were to examine the experiences of Black African migrant families in accessing health promotion services.
·academic.oup.com·
Black African migrants: the barriers with accessing and utilizing health promotion services in the UK
Covid Vaccine: Employees Who Get Shots Enjoy More Office Benefits Than Holdouts - Bloomberg
Covid Vaccine: Employees Who Get Shots Enjoy More Office Benefits Than Holdouts - Bloomberg
In the U.K., a recent poll suggested that while Britons were strongly supportive of vaccine passports in principle, agreement broke down when asked whether they should be compulsory for pub visits. For marginalised groups, this feels like nudge theory to overcome a reluctance (based on real trauma) to trust public health services: “some employees who don’t want to get the vaccine feel harassed and ostracized.”
·bloomberg.com·
Covid Vaccine: Employees Who Get Shots Enjoy More Office Benefits Than Holdouts - Bloomberg
Inside the ‘Covid Triangle’: a catastrophe years in the making | Free to read
Inside the ‘Covid Triangle’: a catastrophe years in the making | Free to read
High levels of deprivation and job insecurity, vast income inequality, housing discrimination and medical disparities have long had a severe impact on the tangle of communities and ethnic minority populations that live in these boroughs. But when combined with the necessity to go to work, to take public transport and to share space in densely packed housing, they also provided the perfect breeding ground for a deadly virus. The domino effect would prove catastrophic.
·ft.com·
Inside the ‘Covid Triangle’: a catastrophe years in the making | Free to read
Poverty, inequality and COVID-19: the forgotten vulnerable
Poverty, inequality and COVID-19: the forgotten vulnerable
For people of low socio-economic status (SES), a number of factors increase their exposure to COVID-19. Possible causal mechanisms include an increased exposure to the virus, the stress and comorbidities associated with poverty and reduced access to health care. UK policymakers rapidly identified people with multiple comorbidities as particularly vulnerable. However, they must expand their definition of vulnerability to include social factors as risks for COVID-19.
·ncbi.nlm.nih.gov·
Poverty, inequality and COVID-19: the forgotten vulnerable