JACKSON, Miss. (WJTV) - Black men face some of the highest rates of chronic disease, as well as some of the lowest access to care.
The annual Black Men's Health Equity Conference was held on Saturday at Tougaloo College in Jackson. It was hosted by the Institute for the Advancement of Minority Health. The conference focused on closing the health gap affecting Black men in Mississippi and beyond.
“Black men are three or four more times more likely than other groups to pass away from heart disease, diabetes, and kidney disease, as well. So, these different chronic illnesses, the disparity rates are so wide. And these particular communities have also a low rate of screening and testing. So, it's very important for us to educate and provide interventions to some of these chronic illnesses, a