Series from the Lancet journals

The Lancet Series on racism, xenophobia, discrimination, and health

Executive Summary

Racism, xenophobia, and discrimination exist in every modern society causing avoidable disease and premature death among groups who are often already disadvantaged. This Series examines how the historic systems and structures of power and oppression, and discriminatory ideologies have shaped policy and practice today, and are root causes of racial health inequities. Furthermore, by applying a global lens and intersectional framework, overlapping forms of oppression such as age, gender, and socioeconomic status and their impact on discrimination are analysed. Interventions to address the spectrum of drivers of adverse health outcomes with a focus on the structural, societal, legal, human right, institutional and system level are reviewed. Research recommendations and key approaches for moving forward are proposed.

Series

Painting of a multi-ethnic group of people, with the globe in the background Image generated by Dr Sujitha Selvarajah using DALL•E 2

Audio

Advancing racial and ethnic equity in science, medicine, and global health

A special joint episode sees Prof. Delanjathan Devakumar, host of the Race & Health podcast and Professor of Global Child Health at UCL, speak with Prof. Tendayi Achiume, Dr. Gideon Lasco, and Dr. Sujitha Selvarajah about what racism means to them, how racism affects health, and what we can learn from The Lancet’s new Series on racial and ethnic equity in science, medicine, and global health.

Infographics

December 8, 2022

Racism, xenophobia, discrimination, and health

Racism, xenophobia, and discrimination exist in every modern society causing avoidable disease and premature death among groups who are often already disadvantaged. The Lancet Series on racism, xenophobia, discrimination, and health examines how the historic systems and structures of power and oppression, and discriminatory ideologies have shaped policy and practice today, and are root causes of racial health inequities.

Related Content