He is missing from the health care system. He is less likely to hold a job that provides health insurance. Otherwise, he is underinsured. Despite chronic poverty that cries out for relief, he often slips through the cracks of a frayed social safety net. Medicaid, focused on pregnant women and children, rarely includes him. He bears a disparate burden of disease. He dies early and struggles frequently against structures that render him invisible.
That reflection, delivered by Keith Elder, flows from the shared mission he and his colleague Keon Gilbert have embraced: bringing Black men into public conversations about health, health care, and health reform.
Elder, PhD, MPH, chairs the Department of Health Management and Policy at Saint Louis Universityโs School of Public Health. His work moves beyond disparities and dysfunction, expanding the research to expose the breadth and depth of Black menโs health issues from cradle to grave. Gilbert, DrPH, MPH, MPA, an assistant professor in the department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education, focuses on outreach, education, and interventions that increase Black menโs access to social capital in order to improve overall health outcomes.
They are co-authors of recent studies: โMenโs Health Disparities in Confidence to Manage Health,โ published in 2013 issue of the International Journal of Menโs Health, and โTrust Medication, Adherence and Hypertension Control in Southern African American Men,โ which appeared in the American Journal of Public Health in December 2012.
They both credit New Connectionsโa Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) initiative that works to expand the diversity of perspectives informing RWJF program strategyโwith helping to enhance their research agendas, and deepening their network of support.
Elder (a 2009 New Connections alumnus), whose research marked some of the seminal data on Black menโs health status, encouraged Gilbert to seek RWJF support. A current fellow, Gilbert is using his New Connections grant to engage Black men around access to the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The goal is to understand how to help those without insurance obtain it, and to persuade those who have it to use it more often by seeking routine and preventive health care services.
Black Men Missing From Health Care Conversation
One of the first hurdles confronting Black men is health coverage. Second, and more fundamentally, many Black men do not readily access health care even when they are insured. Elder notes that Black men with health insurance are two times less likely to use it than other groups.
โBlack men are one of the hardest groups to reach. No one is looking to engage them, and they are just not plugged into the systems,โ says Gilbert.
โOur published research is important, but the people we need to reach arenโt in the academic world,โ says Elder. โThey are in the barbershop, on the basketball court, and in communities that are medically underserved.โ
Health Disparitiesโ Effect on Black Men
The health disparities suffered by Black men are stunning: The death rate from heart disease is 30 percent higher than that of white male counterparts; from stroke, it is 60 percent higher. The diabetes death rate is 200 percent higher for Black men, and the death rate from prostate cancer is more than 200 percent higher.
Gilbert points out that another impediment comes from Black menโs sense of self, perceived masculinity, and gender identity. He adds that they are not socialized to go to the doctor on a regular basis: Research shows that men younger than 18 tend to go to the doctor when prompted by a parent, or because they are active in sports, but after the age of 18 health care utilization drops off dramatically.
There is a history in America of rendering Black men invisible, which puts them at greater risk, offers Gilbert. โWhen men have the opportunity to participate in decision-making, it makes a difference. It increases their engagement and the chances of improved outcomes.โ
This spills over into policy as well. Gilbert notes that the states choosing to expand Medicaid provisions under ACA now include people with felony convictions, who previously were ineligible for Medicaid coverage. This provides an important opportunity to introduce and expand access to a large segment of excluded and marginalized populations.
Familiar Settings, Fresh Dialogue
Gilbert says men have to be part of the discussion in varied situations. โThe conversation has to happen at the dining room tableโฆin churches, barbershops, fraternities, and other settings. Thereโs a need to really focus and dig deep, to expand the definition of manhoodโyour need to be healthy, eat a good diet, and get exercise and health screenings.โ
Elder underscores the importance of access, coupled with trust in the medical system. โFrom a medical encounter and management perspective, we need to make sure the experience is good and fruitful. Thatโs what the Affordable Care Act can do. Men need a good medical home.โ
Ending Disparities, Building a Culture of Health
Elder believes the answer is to take steps in the right direction. โHealth disparities are not going away in our lifetime,โ he says. โEven men who know better donโt do better. Black men still donโt have a 100 percent adherence rate to medical advice.โ
The challenges can be combated by a national and sustained commitment to researching Black menโs health throughout the lifespan. No one has really taken a systemic look at Black men. Gilbert adds, โThe majority of research is focused on cancer, violence, or HIV.โ
Elder advocates for more funding and support at the undergraduate and graduate levels. This will build a pipeline of students who will increase their educational achievement and expand the cadre of scholars devoted to Black menโs health.
โIf we donโt have the science, we canโt change the policy and how we deliver care. Who are you going to compare Black men to?โ Elder asks.

