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Race, Racism, and Access to Renal Transplantation among African Americans
2017
Journal of health care for the poor and underserved
There are clear and compelling racial disparities in access to renal transplant, which is the therapy of choice for many patients with end stage renal disease. This paper conceptualizes the role of racism (i.e., internalized, personally-mediated, and institutionalized) in creating and perpetuating these disparities at multiple levels of the social ecology by integrating two oft en-cited theories in the literature. Internalized racism is manifested at the intrapersonal level when, for example,
doi:10.1353/hpu.2017.0005
pmid:28238984
fatcat:hotvfaukendntjpcghupvgllnm