Objective: The aim of this study was to describe current measurement of health disparities for Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) populations and subgroups across U.S. states. Methods:… Click to show full abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to describe current measurement of health disparities for Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) populations and subgroups across U.S. states. Methods: State department of health websites were searched for publicly available online reports and interactive databases denoted as state health or minority health assessments. Sources were examined to determine whether health metrics stratified by any racial/ethnic groups included the AANHPI aggregate population or subgroups. The number and frequency of AANHPI population designations were tabulated, as were the proportion of states that included AANHPIs in stratified metrics in four domains across the life span and the median number of metrics (1) stratified by any racial/ethnic group and (2) including AANHPI populations. A Pearson correlation coefficient assessed the association between the proportion of AANHPIs in state populations and the proportion of state metrics that included AANHPIs in the stratification. Results: States used 17 AANHPI population descriptors. Of 49 states stratifying health metrics by race/ethnicity, 34 included AANHPI populations and 2 included disaggregated AANHPI subgroups in ≥1 metric. The proportion of states that included AANHPI populations in stratification ranged from 57% for maternal–infant health to 69% for adult health, and by metric groups within domains, the proportion ranged from 14% for maternal mortality to 100% for marital or head of household status. The median number of metrics reported for AANHPI populations was lower than the median number reported for other racial/ethnic groups in adult, maternal–infant, and child and adolescent health domains. The proportion of state metrics that included AANHPIs in racial/ethnic stratification was not correlated with the proportion of AANHPIs in state populations (r=0.30). Conclusions and Implications for Health Equity: AANHPIs were substantially underrepresented in state health equity data, with rare subgroup disaggregation. Reducing disparities and inequities affecting AANHPI health in the United States requires improved and equitable data.
               
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