Addressing upstream or fundamental causes (such as poverty, limited education, and compromised healthcare access) is essential
to reduce healthcare disparities. But such approaches are not sufficient, and downstream interventions, addressing the consequences
of those fundamental causes within the context of any existing health system, are also necessary. We present a definition
of healthcare disparities and two key principles (that healthcare is a social good and disparities in outcomes are a quality
problem) that together provide a framework for addressing disparities downstream. Adapting the chronic care model, we examine
a hierarchy of three domains for interventions (health system, provider–patient interactions, and clinical decision making)
to reduce disparities downstream and discuss challenges to implementing the necessary changes.
KEY WORDS healthcare disparity - poverty - downstream - upstream - education