AEGiS-LT: La Raza Convention Adds Focus on Health Los Angeles TimesImportant note: Information in this article was accurate in 2006. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
Click here to return to Los Angeles Times main menu
DonateNow


La Raza Convention Adds Focus on Health

Los Angeles Times - July 10, 2006
Teresa Watanabe, Times Staff Writer


-- National advocacy group adds dietary and lifestyle issues to its familiar concerns such as jobs and immigration.

On a crowded Los Angeles Convention Center floor Sunday, Gloria Ramirez winced as a medical technician poked her finger and pressed out blood into a hand-held device to measure sugar levels. The digital machine quickly showed the score: 129, close to borderline levels for diabetes.

The news, she said, wasn't surprising. Her doctor had told her a year ago to lay off tortillas, red meat and her favorite food, Mexican breads, to avoid diabetes. Tough as that's been, Ramirez said, there was one thing that made the sacrifices worthwhile: her family.

"It's hard," said Ramirez, a 61-year-old secretary from San Ysidro, Calif. "But I'm trying to be healthy because I'm starting to have grandkids and I want to see them grow."

Free health checks, a forum on HIV and AIDS, and a morning workshop on leading-edge research into Latino health issues highlighted the second day of the National Council of La Raza's annual conference in Los Angeles. Latinos suffer from disproportionately high rates of diabetes, obesity, AIDS and other diseases, so the Washington, D.C.-based civil rights and advocacy organization is aiming to elevate the issue alongside hot-button concerns such as immigration.

"Immigration seems to dominate the landscape today, but we'd like to be able to draw equal attention to health, jobs, education and economic empowerment," La Raza president Janet Murguia said.

In what experts call the "acculturation paradox," Charles Kamasaki, La Raza senior vice president, said that the health of many Latino immigrants often declines the longer they are in the United States. That's because their diets add more fats, their lifestyles are more sedentary and their access to healthcare is more limited than in their home countries.

In addition, he said, women begin to drink and smoke more and have sex at younger ages once they migrate here.

To help reverse that trend, La Raza and its network of affiliated community organizations have helped train 400 volunteer health educators. Their job: to bring health-related information to those whom Kamasaki said mass-marketing campaigns tend to miss - mostly poor immigrants with limited English and education.

Ramirez, a board member of the nonprofit San Ysidro Health Center near the U.S.-Mexico border, said she viewed health issues as more important community concerns than immigration and even jobs.

"Even without papers, it's not hard to find a job through friends or family," Ramirez said, as her friends sat down for their blood sugar tests at a booth sponsored by AltaMed Health Services Corp. of Commerce. "But if you become sick, you can't work."

The conference also featured a homeownership fair, with rows of booths for financial institutions. Among them was New Economics for Women, where Nelson Hidalgo passed out fliers about Los Angeles city and county down payment assistance programs.

Veronica Sanchez, a Houston-based regional account manager for J.P. Morgan Chase, said many Latin Americans come to the United States from cash-based economies, mistrust banks and are unfamiliar with the idea of borrowing to finance education, cars or homes. Such attitudes have helped keep homeowner rates lower among Latinos than whites, Veronica Seale of J.P. Morgan Chase said.

Some conference-goers, however, already seemed on their way to the goal of owning a home.

At the Wells Fargo booth, where a soccer ball throwing game drew young crowds, 9-year-old Erika Rodriguez said she was faithfully saving her weekly allowance and had already filled three piggy banks with more than $100.

"I'm going to save it all until I'm an adult and can buy a house," said Erika, sporting Mickey Mouse ears from a nearby Disneyland booth.

Sunday's convention crowd included many families, trolling the aisles for information and free goods - Frisbees and tote bags, water bottles and beer. Ricardo Ricado, 44, a jewelry repairman, came to attend a workshop on careers because, he said, he wanted to find out how to become a technician. His son Felipe, 12, came "just for the prizes," and promptly landed a soccer ball at the State Farm Insurance booth.

Balloons and dance demonstrations, carnival games and raffles gave the conference hall a festive air. And a "Latinas Brunch," featuring Latina entertainment figures, added a celebratory one.

Christy Haubegger, film producer and founder of Latina Magazine, said that Latinas are now in demand in Hollywood and are reshaping the American beauty ideal of thin, tall and blond. "Suddenly, curves are OK," she said. "There's never been a better time to be Latina than now."


060710
LT060707


Copyright © 2006 - Los Angeles Times. All rights reserved. Reproduced with permission. Reproduction of this article (other than one copy for personal reference) must be cleared through the Los Angeles Times, Permissions, Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053.  http://www.latimes.com.

AEGiS is a 501(c)3, not-for-profit, tax-exempt, educational corporation. AEGiS is made possible through unrestricted funding from Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, Elton John AIDS Foundation, the National Library of Medicine, Pacific Life Foundation and donations from users like you.

Always watch for outdated information. This article first appeared in 2006. This material is designed to support, not replace, the relationship that exists between you and your doctor.

AEGiS presents published material, reprinted with permission and neither endorses nor opposes any material. All information contained on this website, including information relating to health conditions, products, and treatments, is for informational purposes only. It is often presented in summary or aggregate form. It is not meant to be a substitute for the advice provided by your own physician or other medical professionals. Always discuss treatment options with a doctor who specializes in treating HIV.

Copyright ©1980, 2006. AEGiS. All materials appearing on AEGiS are protected by copyright as a collective work or compilation under U.S. copyright and other laws and are the property of AEGiS, or the party credited as the provider of the content. .