E/CN.4/1995/78/Add.1
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In health, the delivery services are underfunded and inefficiently
run, resulting in higher rates of infant mortality, communicable diseases
and cancer and decreased life expectancy;
In education, the system is characterized by underfunding,
underachievement, alienation, and racist stereotyping;
In the criminal justice system, the rate of imprisonment and the
application of the death penalty are disproportionately higher among
them;
Police brutality is common in their communities, especially against
youth;
Immigration and refugee policy are biased against them." 14/
38.
The Special Rapporteur would now like to illustrate this panorama with a
number of facts concerning the main topics he has chosen.
A.
Health
39.
The consequences of racism and racial discrimination in the field of
health are reflected in the disparity in access to health care, the infant
mortality rates and the life expectancy of Whites and Blacks or Latino
Americans. This is confirmed by a number of studies and by the interview held
by the Special Rapporteur at the Department of Health and Human Services. For
example, a scrutiny of the statistics on cardiovascular disease and heart
attacks shows that the mortality rate from these diseases is 29 per cent
higher among African Americans than among Whites. The rate among Black women
is twice that among White women. Despite the progress made in reducing
overall infant mortality, the infant mortality rate among African Americans is
twice that of White children. The risks of an African American becoming blind
as a result of glaucoma are seven times greater than those faced by a White.
The following statement is to be found in a publication by the New York
African American Institute:
"Glaucoma is one of many communicable diseases that continue to
exacerbate the health crisis in the African American community. The
crisis is further compounded by recent revelations of the resurgence of
both syphilis and tuberculosis. When these two are combined with the
HIV/AIDS epidemic, the potential for high incidence of morbidity and
mortality in the African American community is devastating. Of the
152,126 cases of AIDS as reported by the Centers for Disease Control
(CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, for 1990, African and Latino Americans
together comprised 44 per cent of the cumulative reported cases of AIDS
in the U.S. African American women and African American children under
thirteen years of age accounted for 52 per cent of all cases of AIDS in
those categories by September 1990 as reported by the CDC." 15/
40.
The incidence of cancer, as well as of sexually transmitted diseases, of
infant mortality and of cardiovascular disorders is also disproportionately
high among African Americans in comparison with Whites. Lung cancer, cancer
of the oesophagus and stomach cancer are predominant among African Americans