Pima Indians of Arizona have the world's highest diabetes rates. With knowledge that his patient is a Pima Indian, it would probably be a best practice for a physician to order more thorough blood glucose tests to screen for diabetes.
Prostate cancer is nearly twice as common among black men as white men. It would also be a best practice for a physician to be attentive to -- even risk false positive PSAs -- prostate cancer among his black patients.
What about physicians who order routine mammograms for their 40-year and older female patients but not their male patients? The American Cancer Society predicts that about 400 men will die of breast cancer this year.
Because of a correlation between race, sex and disease, the physician is using a cheap-to-observe characteristic, such as race or sex, as an estimate for a more costly-to-observe characteristic, the presence of a disease. The physician is practicing both race and sex profiling.
Does that make the physician a racist or sexist? Should he be brought up on charges of racial discrimination because he's guessing that his black patients are more likely to suffer from prostate cancer?
Should sex discrimination or malpractice suits be brought against physicians who prescribe routine mammograms for their female patients but not their male patients?
Read the rest at the Washington Examiner
(Dr. Walter Williams is currently the John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics at George Mason University)
6 comments:
This makes way too much sense for the liberals to understand.
racial profiling is the most successful way to make arrests .
Funny how the same people feeling persecuted over tough gun laws in urban areas are the same ones who are blind to complaints about RP
How many Japanese were placed in concentration camps during WWII again?
11:43 Where is RP covered in the Constitution ? Those who break the law are the ones against it .
1:10 Are you saying we need a Japanese internment camp ?
Post a Comment