Healthcare: ‘Not a matter of left or right; a matter of right and wrong’

KATHI VALEII | THURSDAY, JUNE 15, 2017 “Sober but optimistic” is how Dr. David A. Ansell describes the subject of his work on inequities in heath care. Dr. Ansell is the senior vice president of community health equity and associate provost for clinical affairs at the Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, work he says he does as a physician under the umbrella of human rights activist. He's written two books that call attention to structural violence in healthcare. His latest, ...

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The World University Rankings: The Death Gap: How Inequality Kills, by David A. Ansell

Clare Bambra commends a polemic that shines a light on the fatal flaws in US healthcare policy In the US, the poor die earlier, black Americans die earlier and poor urban black Americans die earliest of all. In this thoughtful and compelling book, David Ansell draws on almost four decades as a hospital doctor in Chicago in addressing these striking inequalities in health and laying bare the underside of the American dream. The Death Gap shows the scale of the human cost of income ...

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NEJM Podcast 208: How inequality kills — David Ansell talks with us about his new book

https://podcasts.jwatch.org/index.php/podcast-208-how-inequality-kills-david-ansell-talks-with-us-about-his-new-book/2017/06/10/

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Health Affairs Book Review: Bridging The Death Gap

By: Damon Tweedy, Health Affairs Headlines portray Chicago, Illinois, as the epicenter of urban gun violence. But most premature deaths among Chicago’s black residents are caused by heart disease, diabetes, and cancer. In his new book, The Death Gap, David Ansell, senior vice president and associate provost for community health equity and a professor of medicine at Chicago’s Rush University Medical Center, asserts that structural violence is the true cause of the dramatic racial differences ...

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Listen Now: WMUK/NPR Morning Edition

WSW: Inequality in America Kills, Doctor Says By EARLENE MCMICHAEL None of Dr. David Ansell's patients who needed a transplant ever got one in his 27 years at two of Chicago's safety-net hospitals, yet the patients from the trauma units there, many of them black, he says, provided the organs for the procedures at the wealthier hospitals. Why? Ansell says the poorer hospitals had no transplant specialists on staff and, even if a referral were to be made, either the specialist didn't ...

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One doc’s concern about Chicago’s ‘death gap’ fuels sobering new book

Crain's Dr. David Ansell has spent about 40 years working at three hospitals within a 2-mile stretch on the Near West Side, treating patients and serving in various management roles. He can't shake the inequity he's witnessed among his patients over the years, and how it's contributed to their health. Consider this: The life expectancy for someone in the Loop is 85 years, but less than 5 miles west it plummets to 69 years. Read the full article >

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Watch Now: Metropolitan Planning Council

Watch now: @DrDavidAAnsell and MPC's Chloe Gurin-Sands discuss how inequality kills. #ThinknDrink #TheDeathGap pic.twitter.com/E9RZ1QhtSm — MPC (@Metroplanners) May 18, 2017

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NATURE: Inequality: Live poor, die young

Nature.com Abigail A. Sewell examines a physician's study of how deprivation shortens lifespan. David Ansell's passionately written The Death Gap presents a powerful case for social inequality as a cause of disease and disparities in health. The social epidemiologist, physician and public-hospital veteran invokes the concept of 'death gaps' to describe differences in life expectancy by race, ethnicity, class and geography. Read the article >>

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Listen Now: Leonard Lopate Show interview

Listen Now: http://www.wnyc.org/story/david-ansell

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Urban Think & Drink — The Death Gap: How Inequality Kills

There is a 30-year gap in life expectancy between America’s wealthiest and poorest neighborhoods. This trend holds true in Chicago, where life expectancy varies by neighborhood, income, and race. In his 2017 book, The Death Gap: How Inequality Kills, Chicago-based physician David Ansell exposes the structural roots of the life expectancy gap: racial and economic discrimination. Ansell makes the case for why inequality should be considered a societal illness, and provides action steps to ...

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