Reflecting on “The Power of Belief: Mindset and Success”

  

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For additional insights into growth mindset, read The Secret to Raising Smart Kids by Carol S. Dweck (Scientific American Mind 2007 18:36-43)

Discussion post

(1) Share with your peers at least one interesting, relevant, or surprising thing that you learned. Explain why it is interesting, relevant, or surprising to you. Alternatively, ask a question about something in the video or the reading. 36 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN MIND December 2007/Januar y 2008

www.Sc iAmMind.com SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN MIND 37

brilliant student, Jonathan sailed through
grade school. He completed his assign-
ments easily and routinely earned As. Jon-
athan puzzled over why some of his
classmates struggled, and his parents

told him he had a special gift. In the seventh
grade, however, Jonathan suddenly lost inter-
est in school, refusing to do homework or
study for tests. As a consequence, his grades
plummeted. His parents tried to boost their
sons confi dence by assuring him that he was
very smart. But their attempts failed to moti-
vate Jonathan (who is a composite drawn
from several children). Schoolwork, their son
maintained, was boring and pointless.

Our society worships talent, and many
people assume that possessing superior intel-

The Secret to
Raising Smart Kids

Hint: Dont tell your kids that they are. More than three decades
of research shows that a focus on effortnot on intelligence

or abilityis key to success in school and in life

By Carol S. Dweck

A

38 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN MIND December 2007/Januar y 2008

ligence or abilityalong with confi dence in that
abilityis a recipe for success. In fact, however,
more than 30 years of scientifi c investigation
suggests that an overemphasis on intellect or
talent leaves people vulnerable to failure, fearful
of challenges and unwilling to remedy their
shortcomings.

The result plays out in children like Jonathan,
who coast through the early grades under the
dangerous notion that no-effort academic
achievement defi nes them as smart or gifted. Such

children hold an implicit belief that intelligence is
innate and fi xed, making striving to learn seem far
less important than being (or looking) smart. This
belief also makes them see challenges, mistakes
and even the need to exert effort as threats to their
ego rather than as opportunities to improve. And
it causes them to lose confi dence and motivation
when the work is no longer easy for them.

Praising childrens innate abilities, as Jona-
thans parents did, reinforces this mind-set, which
can also prevent young athletes or people in the
workforce and even marriages from living up to
their potential. On the other hand, our studies
show that teaching people to have a growth
mind-set, which encourages a focus on effort
rather than on intelligence or talent, helps make
them into high achievers in school and in life.

The Opportunity of Defeat
I fi rst began to investigate the underpinnings

of human motivationand how people persevere
after setbacksas a psychology graduate student
at Yale University in the 1960s. Animal experi-
ments by psychologists Martin Seligman, Steven
Maier and Richard Solomon of the University of
Pennsylvania had shown that after repeated fail-
ures, most animals conclude that a situation is
hopeless and beyond their control. After such an
experience, the researchers found, an animal
often remains passive even when it can affect
changea state they called learned helplessness.

People can learn to be helpless, too, but not
everyone reacts to setbacks this way. I wondered: JI

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FAST FACTS
Growing Pains

1>> Many people assume that superior intelligence or abil-
ity is a key to success. But more than three decades of

research shows that an overemphasis on intellect or talent
and the implication that such traits are innate and fi xedleaves
people vulnerable to failure, fearful of challenges and unmoti-
vated to learn.

2>> Teaching people to have a growth mind-set, which
encourages a focus on effort rather than on intelli-

gence or talent, produces high achievers in school and in life.

3>> Parents and teachers can engender a growth mind-set
in children by praising them for their effort or persis-

tence (rather than for their intelligence), by telling success sto-
ries that emphasize hard work and love of learning, and by
teaching them about the brain as a learning machine.

Young people who
believe that their

intelligence alone
will enable them

to succeed in
school are often

discouraged
when the going

gets tough.

www.Sc iAmMind.com SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN MIND 39

Why do some students give up when they en-
counter diffi culty, whereas others who are no
more skilled continue to strive and learn? One
answer, I soon discovered, lay in peoples beliefs
about why they had failed.

In particular, attributing poor performance
to a lack of ability depresses motivation more
than does the belief that lack of effort is to blame.
In 1972, when I taught a group of elementary
and middle school children who displayed help-
less behavior in school that a lack of effort (rath-
er than lack of ability) led to their mistakes on
math problems, the kids learned to keep trying
when the problems got tough. They also solved
many of the problems even in the face of diffi –
culty. Another group of helpless children who
were simply rewarded for their success on easy
problems did not improve their ability to solve
hard math problems. These experiments were an
early indication that a focus on effort can help
resolve helplessness and engender success.

Subsequent studies revealed that the most
persistent students do not ruminate about their
own failure much at all but instead think of mis-
takes as problems to be solved. At the University
of Illinois in the 1970s I, along with my then
graduate student Carol Diener, asked 60 fi fth
graders to think out loud while they solved very
diffi cult pattern-recognition problems. Some stu-
dents reacted defensively to mistakes, denigrat-
ing their skills with comments such as I never
did have a good rememory, and their problem-
solving strategies deteriorated.

Others, meanwhile, focused on fi xing errors
and honing their skills. One advised himself: I
should slow down and try to fi gure this out.
Two schoolchildren were particularly inspiring.
One, in the wake of diffi culty, pulled up his chair,
rubbed his hands together, smacked his lips and
said, I love a challenge! The other, also con-
fronting the hard problems, looked up at the ex-
perimenter and approvingly declared, I was
hoping this would be informative! Predictably,
the students with this attitude outperformed
their cohorts in these studies.

Two Views of Intelligence
Several years later I developed a broader the-

ory of what separates the two general classes of
learnershelpless versus mastery-oriented. I re-

alized that these different types of students not
only explain their failures differently, but they
also hold different theories of intelligence. The
helpless ones believe that intelligence is a fi xed
trait: you have only a certain amount, and thats
that. I call this a fi xed mind-set. Mistakes
crack their self-confi dence because they attribute
errors to a lack of ability, which they feel power-
less to change. They avoid challenges because
challenges make mistakes more likely and look-
ing smart less so. Like Jonathan, such children
shun effort in the belief that having to work hard
means they are dumb.

The mastery-oriented children, on the other
hand, think intelligence is malleable and can be
developed through education and hard work.
They want to learn above all else. After all, if you
believe that you can expand your intellectual
skills, you want to do just that. Because slipups
stem from a lack of effort, not ability, they can be
remedied by more effort. Challenges are energiz-
ing rather than intimidating; they offer opportu-
nities to learn. Students with such a growth

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Students who believed that intelligence is malleable (growth
mind-set line) earned higher math grades in the fall of seventh
grade than those who believed in static intelligence (fi xed

mind-set line), even though the two groups had equivalent math
achievement test scores in the sixth grade. The grades of the growth
mind-set group then improved over the next two years, whereas the
grades of the fi xed mind-set students declined.

Mind-set and Math Grades

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Growth mind-set

Fixed mind-set

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Fall Spring Fall Spring
7th Grade 7th Grade 8th Grade 8th Grade

The most persistent students do not ruminate about their
own failure but think of mistakes as problems to be solved.( )

40 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN MIND December 2007/Januar y 2008

mind-set, we predicted, were destined for greater
academic success and were quite likely to outper-
form their counterparts.

We validated these expectations in a study
published in early 2007. Psychologists Lisa Black-
well of Columbia University and Kali H. Trzes-
niewski of Stanford University and I monitored
373 students for two years during the transition
to junior high school, when the work gets more
diffi cult and the grading more stringent, to deter-
mine how their mind-sets might affect their math
grades. At the beginning of seventh grade, we as-
sessed the students mind-sets by asking them to
agree or disagree with statements such as Your
intelligence is something very basic about you
that you cant really change. We then assessed
their beliefs about other aspects of learning and
looked to see what happened to their grades.

As we had predicted, the students with a
growth mind-set felt that learning was a more im-

portant goal in school than getting good grades. In
addition, they held hard work in high regard, be-
lieving that the more you labored at something, the
better you would become at it. They understood
that even geniuses have to work hard for their great
accomplishments. Confronted by a setback such as
a disappointing test grade, students with a growth
mind-set said they would study harder or try a
different strategy for mastering the material.

The students who held a fi xed mind-set, how-
ever, were concerned about looking smart with
little regard for learning. They had negative views
of effort, believing that having to work hard at
something was a sign of low ability. They thought
that a person with talent or intelligence did not
need to work hard to do well. Attributing a bad
grade to their own lack of ability, those with a
fi xed mind-set said that they would study less in
the future, try never to take that subject again
and consider cheating on future tests. A

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According to a survey we conducted in the mid-
1990s, 85 percent of parents believed that prais-
ing childrens ability or intelligence when they per-

form well is important for making them feel smart. But
our work shows that praising a childs intelligence makes
a child fragile and defensive. So, too, does generic praise
that suggests a stable trait, such as You are a good art-
ist. Praise is very valuable, however, if it is carefully
worded. Praise for the specifi c process a child used to
accomplish something fosters motivation and confi dence
by focusing children on the actions that lead to success.
Such process praise may involve commending effort,
strategies, focus, persistence in the face of diffi culty,
and willingness to take on challenges. Here are some
examples:

You did a good job drawing. I like the detail you added
to the peoples faces.

You really studied for your social studies test. You read
the material over several times, outlined it and tested
yourself on it. It really worked!

I like the way you tried a lot of different strategies on
that math problem until you fi nally got it.

That was a hard English assignment, but you stuck with
it until you got it done. You stayed at your desk and kept
your concentration. Thats great!

I like that you took on that challenging project for your
science class. It will take a lot of workdoing the re-
search, designing the apparatus, making the parts and
building it. You are going to learn a lot of great things.

Parents and teachers can also teach children to enjoy
the process of learning by expressing positive views of
challenges, effort and mistakes. Here are examples of
such communications:

Boy, this is hardthis is fun.
Oh, sorry, that was too easyno fun. Lets do some-

thing more challenging that you can learn from.
Lets all talk about what we struggled with today and

learned from. Ill go fi rst.
Mistakes are so interesting. Heres a wonderful mis-

take. Lets see what we can learn from it. C.S.D.

A for Effort

www.Sc iAmMind.com SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN MIND 41

Such divergent outlooks had a dramatic im-
pact on performance. At the start of junior high,
the math achievement test scores of the students
with a growth mind-set were comparable to
those of students who displayed a fi xed mind-set.
But as the work became more diffi cult, the stu-
dents with a growth mind-set showed greater
persistence. As a result, their math grades over-
took those of the other students by the end of the
first semesterand the gap between the two
groups continued to widen during the two years
we followed them [see box on page 39].

Along with Columbia psychologist Heidi
Grant, I found a similar relation between mind-
set and achievement in a 2003 study of 128 Co-
lumbia freshman premed students who were en-
rolled in a challenging general chemistry course.
Although all the students cared about grades, the
ones who earned the best grades were those who
placed a high premium on learning rather than
on showing that they were smart in chemistry.
The focus on learning strategies, effort and per-
sistence paid off for these students.

Confronting Defi ciencies
A belief in fi xed intelligence also makes peo-

ple less willing to admit to errors or to confront
and remedy their defi ciencies in school, at work
and in their social relationships. In a study pub-
lished in 1999 of 168 freshmen entering the Uni-
versity of Hong Kong, where all instruction and
coursework are in English, three Hong Kong col-
leagues and I found that students with a growth
mind-set who scored poorly on their English pro-
fi ciency exam were far more inclined to take a
remedial English course than were low-scoring
students with a fi xed mind-set. The students with
a stagnant view of intelligence were presumably
unwilling to admit to their defi cit and thus passed
up the opportunity to correct it.

A fi xed mind-set can similarly hamper com-
munication and progress in the workplace by
leading managers and employees to discourage
or ignore constructive criticism and advice. Re-
search by psychologists Peter Heslin and Don
VandeWalle of Southern Methodist University
and Gary Latham of the University of Toronto
shows that managers who have a fi xed mind-set
are less likely to seek or welcome feedback from
their employees than are managers with a growth
mind-set. Presumably, managers with a growth
mind-set see themselves as works-in-progress and
understand that they need feedback to improve,
whereas bosses with a fi xed mind-set are more
likely to see criticism as refl ecting their underlying

level of competence. Assuming that other people
are not capable of changing either, executives
with a fi xed mind-set are also less likely to mentor
their underlings. But after Heslin, VandeWalle
and Latham gave managers a tutorial on the value
and principles of the growth mind-set, supervi-
sors became more willing to coach their employ-
ees and gave more useful advice.

Mind-set can affect the quality and longevity
of personal relationships as well, through peo-
ples willingnessor unwillingnessto deal
with diffi culties. Those with a fi xed mind-set are

less likely than those with a growth mind-set to
broach problems in their relationships and to try
to solve them, according to a 2006 study I con-
ducted with psychologist Lara Kammrath of
Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario. After all,
if you think that human personality traits are
more or less fixed, relationship repair seems
largely futile. Individuals who believe people can
change and grow, however, are more confi dent
that confronting concerns in their relationships
will lead to resolutions.

Proper Praise
How do we transmit a growth mind-set to

our children? One way is by telling stories about
achievements that result from hard work. For in-

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(The Author)

CAROL S. DWECK is Lewis and Virginia Eaton Professor of Psychology at
Stanford University. She has held professorships at Columbia University,
the University of Illinois and Harvard University and is a member of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Her most recent book is Mindset,
published by Random House in 2006.

In tutorials that
advance a growth
mind-set, stu-
dents discover
that learning
promotes the
formation of new
connections be-
tween neurons in
the brain.

42 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN MIND December 2007/Januar y 2008

stance, talking about math geniuses who were
more or less born that way puts students in a
fi xed mind-set, but descriptions of great mathe-
maticians who fell in love with math and devel-
oped amazing skills engenders a growth mind-
set, our studies have shown. People also commu-
nicate mind-sets through praise [see box on page
40]. Although many, if not most, parents believe
that they should build up a child by telling him
or her how brilliant and talented he or she is, our
research suggests that this is misguided.

In studies involving several hundred fifth
graders published in 1998, for example, Colum-
bia psychologist Claudia M. Mueller and I gave
children questions from a nonverbal IQ test. Af-
ter the fi rst 10 problems, on which most children
did fairly well, we praised them. We praised some
of them for their intelligence: Wow thats a
really good score. You must be smart at this. We
commended others for their effort: Wow
thats a really good score. You must have worked
really hard.

We found that intelligence praise encouraged
a fi xed mind-set more often than did pats on the
back for effort. Those congratulated for their in-
telligence, for example, shied away from a chal-
lenging assignmentthey wanted an easy one
insteadfar more often than the kids applauded
for their effort. (Most of those lauded for their
hard work wanted the diffi cult problem set from
which they would learn.) When we gave everyone
hard problems anyway, those praised for being
smart became discouraged, doubting their abil-
ity. And their scores, even on an easier problem

set we gave them afterward, declined as com-
pared with their previous results on equivalent
problems. In contrast, students praised for their
effort did not lose confi dence when faced with
the harder questions, and their performance im-
proved markedly on the easier problems that fol-
lowed [see box on opposite page].

Making Up Your Mind-set
In addition to encouraging a growth mind-set

through praise for effort, parents and teachers
can help children by providing explicit instruc-
tion regarding the mind as a learning machine.
Blackwell, Trzesniewski and I recently designed
an eight-session workshop for 91 students whose
math grades were declining in their fi rst year of
junior high. Forty-eight of the students received
instruction in study skills only, whereas the others
attended a combination of study skills sessions
and classes in which they learned about the growth
mind-set and how to apply it to schoolwork.

In the growth mind-set classes, students read
and discussed an article entitled You Can Grow
Your Brain. They were taught that the brain is
like a muscle that gets stronger with use and that
learning prompts neurons in the brain to grow new
connections. From such instruction, many students
began to see themselves as agents of their own
brain development. Students who had been disrup-
tive or bored sat still and took note. One particu-
larly unruly boy looked up during the discussion
and said, You mean I dont have to be dumb?

As the semester progressed, the math grades of
the kids who learned only study skills continued to

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Chemist Marie
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Edison (right) devel-
oped their genius

through passion and
tremendous effort.

www.Sc iAmMind.com SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN MIND 43

decline, whereas those of the students given the
growth-mind-set training stopped falling and be-
gan to bounce back to their former levels. Despite
being unaware that there were two types of in-
struction, teachers reported noticing signifi cant
motivational changes in 27 percent of the children
in the growth mind-set workshop as compared
with only 9 percent of students in the control
group. One teacher wrote: Your workshop has
already had an effect. L [our unruly male student],
who never puts in any extra effort and often doesnt
turn in homework on time, actually stayed up late
to fi nish an assignment early so I could review it
and give him a chance to revise it. He earned a B+.
(He had been getting Cs and lower.)

Other researchers have replicated our results.
Psychologists Catherine Good, then at Colum-
bia, and Joshua Aronson and Michael Inzlicht of
New York University reported in 2003 that a
growth mind-set workshop raised the math and
English achievement test scores of seventh grad-
ers. In a 2002 study Aronson, Good (then a grad-
uate student at the University of Texas at Austin)
and their colleagues found that college students
began to enjoy their schoolwork more, value it
more highly and get better grades as a result of
training that fostered a growth mind-set.

We have now encapsulated such instruc-
tion in an interactive computer program called
Brain ology, which should be more widely
available by mid-2008. Its six modules teach stu-
dents about the brainwhat it does and how to
make it work better. In a virtual brain lab, users
can click on brain regions to determine their
func tions or on nerve endings to see how con-
nections form when people learn. Users can also
advise virtual students with problems as a way
of practicing how to handle schoolwork diffi cul-
ties; additionally, users keep an online journal of
their study practices.

New York City seventh graders who tested a
pilot version of Brainology told us that the pro-
gram had changed their view of learning and
how to promote it. One wrote: My favorite
thing from Brainology is the neurons part where
when u [sic] learn something there are connec-
tions and they keep growing. I always picture
them when Im in school. A teacher said of the
students who used the program: They offer to
practice, study, take notes, or pay attention to
ensure that connections will be made.

Teaching children such information is not just
a ploy to get them to study. People do differ in in-
telligence, talent and ability. And yet research is
converging on the conclusion that great accom-

plishment, and even what we call genius, is typi-
cally the result of years of passion and dedication
and not something that fl ows naturally from a
gift. Mozart, Edison, Curie, Darwin and Czanne
were not simply born with talent; they cultivated
it through tremendous and sustained effort. Simi-
larly, hard work and discipline contribute much
more to school achievement than IQ does.

Such lessons apply to almost every human en-
deavor. For instance, many young athletes value
talent more than hard work and have consequent-
ly become unteachable. Similarly, many people
accomplish little in their jobs without constant
praise and encouragement to maintain their mo-
tivation. If we foster a growth mind-set in our
homes and schools, however, we will give our
children the tools to succeed in their pursuits and
to become responsible employees and citizens. M

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Children praised for their
intelligence solved sig-
nifi cantly fewer problems
after a failure than they
had before encountering
difficulty. In contrast,
children praised for their
effort solved more prob-
lems after their brush
with adversity than they
had before it.

The Effects of Praise

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Praise for
intelligence

Praise for
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(Further Reading)
Praise for Intelligence Can Undermine Childrens Motivation and Perfor-

mance. Claudia M. Mueller and Carol S. Dweck in Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology, Vol. 75, No. 1, pages 3352; November 1998.

Self-Discipline Outdoes IQ in Predicting Academic Performance of Ado-
lescents. A. Duckworth and M. Seligman in Psychological Science, Vol. 16,
pages 939944; 2005.

Why Do Beliefs about Intelligence Infl uence Learning Success? A So-
cial Cognitive Neuroscience Model. J. A. Mangels, B. Butterfi eld, J. Lamb,
C. Good and C. S. Dweck in Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience,
Vol. 1, No. 2, pages 7586; September 2006.

The Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance. Edited
by K. A. Ericsson, N. Charness, P. J. Feltovich and R. R. Hoffman. Cam-
bridge University Press, 2006.

Implicit Theories of Intelligence Predict Achievement across an Adoles-
cent Transition: A Longitudinal Study and an Intervention. Lisa S. Black-
well, Kali H. Trzesniewski and Carol S. Dweck in Child Development, Vol.
78, No. 1, pages 246263; January/February 2007.

Subtle Linguistic Cues Affect Childrens Motivation. A. Cimpian, H.-M. C.
Arce, E. M. Markman and C. S. Dweck in Psychological Science, Vol. 18,
No. 4, pages 314316; April 2007.

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Student 1 need reply comment minimum 150 word

One thing I would consider, just based off of the modules for this week’s lesson on vulnerable populations, is to make individuals living under a certain percentage of the federal poverty line a protected class of people. Doing so would allow for more legislation providing protections for this group and remove a roadblock to protecting a vulnerable group. This is also a form of redistributing resources. Legislation ensuring that resources are more equitably distributed (including creating funds specifically dedicated to protecting vulnerable groups such as children, the elderly, the poor, and people of color) could prove to begin to reverse health inequities.
Public health officials could have a very large role in providing testimony to the importance of these protections. By increasing the public awareness around the importance of protecting vulnerable populations, as well as increasing the amount of official policy recommendations suggesting these protections, public health officials could actually play some of the largest roles in creating this social change. As we’ve seen since the early days of the COVID pandemic, there is a level of mistrust from the general public towards public health officials and a high level of concern about the economy. If economists were on board and provided similar testimony, I believe this would go a long way towards increasing public perception of public health protections. The average person could support this testimony by voting for legislation and leaders that increase protections for vulnerable populations.
In terms of limits, I think it is important to center the vulnerable individuals. For some populations, namely people of color and low SES populations, this should be relatively easy. For the elderly and children, this may prove to be more difficult. While there are certainly competent experts amongst the age range considered to be “elderly”, the opinions of the most vulnerable would need to be sought. For children, experts in the child and adolescent health community would need to be trusted to act in the best interest of the population they serve and to center the voices of the most vulnerable. Through my interactions with this community, I would hope and expect this to be the case.

Student 2 need reply comment minimum 150 word

Protections for vulnerable people such as children, the elderly, the poor, and people of color must be taken seriously for their health to be prioritized and to have the ability to reach the highest attainment of physical health that other populations have access to. In terms of protections for children, certain laws are already in place. This does not mean that children always have access to the healthiest environments so it is important for public health officials to be engaged with communities, more so families, in order to estimate the health of this population. In the module, I liked the idea of free home assessments for families who are worried about indoor air pollutants. I think that another way we could prioritize children’s health is through schools and after-school programs. There could be after-school programs focused on physical activity and nutrition for children.
In terms of the elderly, public health officials should prioritize social engagement with isolated seniors. In the reading by Lopez and Goldoftas, they talked about extreme weather circumstances where the elderly were isolated and unable to get help. I know in some cities there are programs where youth can have an elderly ‘buddy’ where they call them daily or do an activity once a week with them to get them out of their house. I think that programs like that are important so that the elderly feel connected to their community and have someone looking out for them if their family is out of state. The reading also talked about engaging with the elderly and making a plan for emergencies so that if something occurred, this population would not be left on their own. Part of emergency preparedness done by public health officials should pay special attention to isolated seniors.
People who are living below the poverty line should be given special protections to ensure that their health does not deteriorate. Public health officials should have resources available for those who might not be able to afford them or even have methods in which they can provide care in the community, rather than having citizens find ways to come to a health center, as that could pose transportation, cost, and childcare issues. Health care is something that everyone should have access to, regardless of their ability to pay. Doctors, nurses, and other healthcare professionals can play a part in this by possibly volunteering time or health resources to assist those most in need.
For people of color, there have been injustices in terms of residency, education, income, vocation, and more. Public health officials can help protect this population by making sure that communities of color are not left out of community benefits, like access to clean water. Leaders of towns should also prioritize making sure that communities of color have their voices heard and their needs addressed. This is a population that often lacks political power and voice, yet often suffers the most. Politicians need to hear the voices of all the people that they are serving, not just those that hold the power.
Public health professionals are not the only ones who can help protect these vulnerable populations. Healthcare professionals, educators, social workers, law officials, and more can actively work to protect these populations. Raising awareness about the specific needs of these populations is a start, but real action needs to be taken. There are certain limits ranging from costs to manpower. However, raising awareness will include gaining community support and hopefully others who are passionate about helping protect these populations. Another limit that is important to pay attention to is recognizing whose voice is heard. These are vulnerable populations and it would be wrong to assume a voice for them. If they have needs, we need to let these populations determine them, not an outside source.

  

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