• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Geriatrics

Geriatrics

Ethnogeriatrics

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Home
  • Culture Med
    • Ethnogeriatrics Overview
      • Introduction
      • Patterns of Health Risk
      • Fund of Knowledge
      • Assessment
      • Delivery of Care
    • Glossary
    • Interview Strategies
  • Ethno Med
    • Background
    • African American
    • Alaska Native
    • American Indian
    • Asian Indian American
    • Chinese American
    • Filipino American
    • Hawaiian and Pacific Islander
    • Hispanic / Latino American
    • Hmong American
    • Japanese American
    • Korean American
    • Pakistani American
    • Vietnamese American
  • Medical Interpreters
    • Microlectures
    • Partnering with medical interpreter
  • Training
  • Media Coverage
  • About Us
    • Overview
    • SAGE Certificate Program
    • iSAGE Team
    • Contact iSAGE
    • Aging Adult Services at Stanford
    • System Requirements

Barriers to Minority Research Participation Among African Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans, and Pacific Islanders

July 28, 2022 by Anastasia Divnich

THE IMPORTANCE OF RACIAL and ethnic minority participation in clinical research has been well established including, but not limited to, generalizability of research findings, equity in provision of health care, and accuracy of ethnicity-specific subgroup analyses. Despite a series of national-level initiatives in the past 2 decades from the National Institutes of Health, the Federal Drug Administration (FDA), and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, racial and ethnic minorities remain underrepresented in clinical research. Racial/ethnic minorities constitute more than 30% of the US population, but enrollment by race/ethnicity of National Cancer Institute publicly funded cancer clinical trials (phase I–III treatment studies, January 1, 2003, through June 30, 2005) revealed that they represented less than 18% of clinical trial participants.

news

Primary Sidebar

Searchable Ethnogeriatrics Reference Database

new

Get skills: Cross Cultural Medicine

new As medicine becomes more complex and specialized by the minute, the communication gulf between doctors and their patients is becoming progressively insurmountable. Become skilled in providing culturally effective care:
  • Download step by step guide to working with medical interpreters.
  • Watch the microlecture series on Cross Cultural Medicine
 

PBS : Letter Project

Photo: Letter Project on PBS
Tweets by @palliator

NPR Health News

Photo: life support

KQED News

Photo: old person with cane
© 2019 Stanford Medicine
Privacy Policy • Terms of Use