Asian and Pacific Islander Americans: An Overview of Demographic Characteristics and Health Care Issues.
- 1 January 1993
- journal article
- Vol. 1 (1) , 20-36
Abstract
PURPOSE: To review the demographic characteristics of Asian and Pacific Islander Americans (APIAs) and their health care needs. METHODS: The author reviewed the 1990 Census data, later Current Population Surveys, monographs, books, and the medical literature on APIAs based on MEDLINE and other sources. FINDINGS: APIAs are the fastest growing minority in the U.S. They are mostly foreignborn, highly diversified, heterogeneous, bipolar in socioeconomic status, and concentrated in the West and metropolitan areas. APIAs have many health care needs: lack of health data, ethnocultural barriers, and high frequency of hepatitis B and tuberculosis and certain genetic disorders such as thalassemia and lactase deficiency. It is also questionable whether some U.S. norms and standards based on nonAPIA subjects are appropriate for APIAs. CONCLUSIONS: APIAs are a fast growing minority whose many unmet health care needs have been overshadowed by the myth of a model minority. The health care system should address these needs and assure equal access to health services for all minorities. KEY WORDS: Asian Americans, Culture, Ethnicity, Health Services Accessibility, Health Education, Health Policy, Hepatitis B, Minority Groups, Thalassemia, TuberculosisThis publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: