In this program, Joseph L. Graves, Jr., PhD, Pilar Ossorio, PhD, JD, and Morris W. Foster, PhD, address key issues in the controversial topic of race-specific medicine.
Joseph L.Graves, Jr., PhD, explores three main points:
Pilar Ossario, PhD, JD, analyzes two central themes:
Morris W. Foster, PhD, discusses drug development in the context of health disparities. Dr. Foster suggests that instead of customized therapies for individuals, pharmacogenomics may just re-arrange the way in which the economics of drug development are calculated. He uses American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations as a framework for a model for the groups that may be affected. Like many other populations that experience health disparities, AI/AN populations have a lesser economic capacity to attract investments in targeted drug discovery and pay for access to cutting-edge diagnostics and drugs. If pharmacogenomic drugs are provided or developed for AI/AN people through that identity-specific lens, the potential for confounding the social and the biological is considerable. But the economic, cultural, and other challenges that AI/AN people face in having access to pharmacogenomic benefits may most effectively be addressed through the identity portal, so the engagement between pharmacogenomics and historical, social groups and identities may be unavoidable.
This two-hour program is from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Minority Health Project's 12th Annual Summer Public Health Research Institute and Videoconference.
UNC-Chapel Hill's annual Summer Public Health Research Institute and Videoconference is a unique forum that enables experts in the area of health disparities to reach an audience of several hundred researchers, educators, administrators, practitioners, and students throughout the U.S. Initiated in 1995, its aims include the identification and reduction of barriers to conducting health research in minority communities. Read more on the UNC website.