UNMC participates in VCU’s health disparities conference

Educators, health care professionals and researchers came together June 10 for the second annual Health Disparities Conference: Progress Toward Eliminating Health Disparities. The conference, which discussed the nature of racial and ethnic health disparities and the efforts to combat them, was at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) in Richmond, Va.

The daylong conference attracted almost 250 people from across the country and featured faculty from UNMC, VCU, Morehouse School of Medicine, Old Dominion University, and health officials from the Commonwealth of Virginia.









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Rubens Pamies, M.D.

UNMC faculty played an integral role in the conference and will be involved in future conferences with VCU, said Rubens Pamies, M.D., UNMC vice chancellor for academic affairs. In addition to serving on the conference planning committee, Dr. Pamies was the luncheon speaker. He spoke about the principles of cultural medicine and the role of research on health disparities.

John McClain, Ph.D., associate vice chancellor of academic affairs at UNMC, and Mary McNamee, Ph.D., assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs at UNMC, also were involved in the conference. Dr. McClain participated in a plenary session on how diversifying the workforce makes a difference, and also served on the planning committee.

Louis Sullivan, M.D., served as moderator of the plenary session. Dr. Sullivan is chairman of the President’s Advisory Committee on Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).

“We decided the conference also could serve as a culmination of what the Virginia-Nebraska Alliance has done throughout the year,” Dr. Pamies said. “It highlights the Virginia-Nebraska Alliance and raises awareness around the country about what we’re doing regarding health disparities and diversifying our health care workforce.”

“As little as five years ago, maybe we would have a little section at conferences on health disparities. Now there are several conferences dedicated to this issue around the country,” said Dr. Pamies, who’s also involved in a conference later this year with former U.S. Surgeon General David Satcher, M.D.

Dr. Pamies said the conference was unique in that it added the political spotlight component and highlighted the Virginia-Nebraska Alliance, which deals with promoting access and training for minority students.

Dr. McClain agreed. “The conference was extremely useful because it provided a strong connection between the global problem and specific solutions such as the establishment of the Virgainia – Nebraska Alliance as a means of addressing workforce issues,” he said.









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John McClain, Ph.D.

Last September, five HBCUs and a leading Virginia community college partnered with UNMC and Virginia Commonwealth University to create the Virginia-Nebraska Alliance, with the goal of increasing the number of minority health professionals and researchers nationwide and promoting better health outcomes for underrepresented minorities.

Dr. Sullivan, to his credit, has been very good about highlighting the Virginia-Nebraska Alliance, Dr. Pamies said. Dr. Sullivan is president and chairman of the board for the Virginia-Nebraska Alliance and president emeritus of Morehouse School of Medicine.

“The Virginia-Nebraska Alliance has been a good thing for us,” Dr. Pamies said. “It has generated awareness through national media. It’s also brought the HBCUs into focus and has them working on collaborating more to offer students opportunities. All-in-all, the HBCUs will benefit greatly from this. We need to ensure the students are well prepared academically prior to entering a professional school.”

Conference attendees shared positive comments about the Virginia-Nebraska Alliance, Dr. Pamies said, adding that HBCUs are looking into partnering with others to form such alliances. “As the notoriety of the group grows, I suspect the conference will attract more people,” he said. “The whole field is new from the stance of a fulltime organized basis. It’s the only way we can solve some of these issues.”

Not only do health disparities exist among various cultures, Dr. Pamies said, but they also exist among other groups, including the elderly, those with disabilities and those in rural communities.

“That’s why we need conferences like these. We’re becoming a more diverse country. When the chancellor made the recent trip across Nebraska, some towns in the rural communities reported as much as 25 percent of their communities are primarily Spanish-speaking,” Dr. Pamies said. “They need our assistance in helping them solve some of the issues that arise as a result of these demographic changes. Nebraska is not immune to what’s happening around the country. We have our own unique issues.”

The conference covered a myriad of topics including the factors leading to health disparities and how they derive from the patient; the health care system and society; various systems and community approaches to overcoming financial and access barriers to health care; and the role of research on health disparities.

Discussions are underway for UNMC to co-host the next health disparities conference with VCU, Dr. Pamies said. Topic areas will include policy, health, research and education issues, as well as a keynote speaker who will set the stage for future directions related to health disparities. Plans also include poster presentations and workshops from students involved in Virginia-Nebraska Alliance summer programs.

Steven Woolf, M.D., professor and director of research in VCU’s Department of Family Medicine, was the keynote speaker at the recent conference. Dr. Woolf presented “Our Struggle for Health Equity,” explaining how deaths due to health disparities can be reduced and how they outnumber lives saved due to health technology.

Conference breakout sessions also focused on disease-focused solutions, such as a walking program and dietary interventions for obesity; complementary and alternative medicine; and area health education centers’ impact on minority representation in the health care professions.

Among the panelists at the conference were Dr. Pamies, Dr. Sullivan; Sen. Benjamin J. Lambert III, Virginia General Assembly; Barbara DeBuono, M.D., senior medical director/group leader of public health, and Pfizer Global Pharmaceuticals.

Notable VCU faculty include Sheldon Retchin, M.D., VCU Health System CEO and VCU vice president for health sciences; Sheryl Garland, vice president, Department of Community Outreach; Kevin Allison, director of applied outreach; Denise Daly, executive director of Richmond Enhancing Access to Community Healthcare and instructor in the Division of Quality Health Care; Cyndy Simonson, associate professor, Massey Cancer Center Outreach; and Diane Wilson, Ed.D., associate professor of internal medicine.