Public Health Needs and Scientific Opportunities in Research on Latinas
Hortensia Amaro, PhD and
Adela de la Torre, PhD
Hortensia Amaro is with the Bouve College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University, Boston, Mass. Adela de la Torre is with the Chicana/o Studies Program, University of California, Davis.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Hortensia Amaro, PhD, Bouve College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Ave, Stearns Hall Suite 503, Boston, MA 02115-5000 (e-mail: h.amaro{at}neu.edu).
Much of the research on women's health has not deepened ourunderstanding of health issues affecting Latinas. Yet integrationof research on Latinas into the women's health agenda is importantfor at least 2 reasons.
First, critical public health issues facing Latinas must bebetter understood if effective interventions designed to eliminateracial and ethnic disparities in health are to be developedand implemented. Second, studies on the health of Latinas representunique opportunities to advance scientific understandings ofunderlying processes relevant to the health of other populations.Such research can further our knowledge of the processes underlyingcultural adaptation and negotiation of changing sex roles andhow these issues affect the health of women.
Critical research and empirical approaches that help us to understandhow race, ethnicity, sex, and class shape the health of Latinaswill inform broader public health issues.
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