
Vincent Guilamo-Ramos
Articles
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Nov 17, 2024 |
lasvegassun.com | Vincent Guilamo-Ramos
When the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published data in May that showed overall progress in reducing new HIV infections, everyone breathed a sigh of relief — and had the sense that the light at the end of the tunnel in a 40-year epidemic was getting brighter. Of course, the paradox of progress is that it reveals how much further we must go. Case in point: The same CDC data also revealed a largely invisible crisis facing Latinos.
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Nov 13, 2024 |
miamiherald.com | Vincent Guilamo-Ramos
When the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published data in May of this year that showed overall progress in reducing new HIV infections, everyone breathed a sigh of relief — and had the sense that the light at the end of the tunnel in a 40-year epidemic was getting brighter. Of course, the paradox of progress is that it reveals how much further we must go. Case in point: The same CDC data also revealed a largely invisible crisis facing Latinos.
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Sep 26, 2024 |
ajph.aphapublications.org | Vincent Guilamo-Ramos |Francis K. Amankwah |Georges Benjamin
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Jun 26, 2024 |
healthaffairs.org | Vincent Guilamo-Ramos |Francis K. Amankwah |Kosali I. Simon |John Ayanian |Margarita Alegría |Sara Rosenbaum
More than twenty years have passed since the Institute of Medicine (now the National Academy of Medicine) published its 2003 landmark report, Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. The central conclusion of the report was that racial and ethnic disparities were a hallmark of the US health care system and that unequal treatment persisted even when controlling for health insurance coverage.
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Jun 25, 2024 |
healthaffairs.org | Vincent Guilamo-Ramos |Francis K. Amankwah |Kosali I. Simon |John Ayanian |Margarita Alegría |Sara Rosenbaum
More than twenty years have passed since the Institute of Medicine (now the National Academy of Medicine) published its 2003 landmark report, Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. The central conclusion of the report was that racial and ethnic disparities were a hallmark of the US health care system and that unequal treatment persisted even when controlling for health insurance coverage.
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