US agency vows steps to address COVID-19 inequalities

MP records 1,357 new coronavirus cases, ten deaths

New York:

If Black, Hispanic and Native Americans are hospitalised and killed by the coronavirus at far higher rates than others, shouldn’t the government count them as high risk for serious illness? That seemingly simple question has been mulled by federal health officials for months.

And so far the answer is no. But federal public health officials have released a new strategy that vows to improve data collection and take steps to address stark inequalities in how the disease is affecting Americans.

Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stress that the disproportionately high impact on certain minority groups is not driven by genetics. Rather, it’s social conditions that make people of colour more likely to be exposed to the virus and — if they catch it — more likely to get seriously ill.

“To just name racial and ethnic groups without contextualising what contributes to the risk has the potential to be stigmatising and victimising,” said the CDC’s Leandris Liburd, who two months ago was named chief health equity officer in the agency’s coronavirus response. Outside experts agreed that there’s a lot of potential downside to labelling certain racial and ethnic groups as high risk.

“You have to be very careful that you don’t do it in such a way that you’re defining a whole class of people as ‘COVID carriers.'” said Dr Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association. COVID-19‘s unequal impact has been striking: — American Indians and Native Alaskans are hospitalized at rates more than five times that of white people. The hospitalisation rate for Black and Hispanic Americans is more than four times higher than for whites, according to CDC data through mid-July.

Detailed tracking through mid-May suggested Black people accounted for 25% of US deaths as of that time, even though they are about 13% of the US population. About 24% of deaths were Hispanics, who account for about 18.5% of the population. And 35% were white people, who are 60% of the population.

Other researchers have pointed out problems for minorities as they try access coronavirus tests or health care. But while sometimes highlighting the disproportionate toll the virus has had on certain racial and ethnic groups, the CDC is being careful not to categorize them as high risk or meriting higher priority for certain health services.

Indeed, in May, the CDC took down guidelines it had posted that said minorities without symptoms should be among those prioritized for coronavirus testing. Government officials later said the posting had been a mistake. Last month, the CDC revised its list of which Americans are at higher risk for severe COVID-19 illness, adding pregnant women and people with certain underlying conditions. Race and ethnicity were left out.

On Friday, the CDC issued a racial equity strategy document vowing better data collection on how the virus is impacting minorities. It also calls for improvements in testing, contact tracing, and safely quarantining, isolating and treating minorities at risk. The agency also said it will take steps to diversify the public health workforce responding to the epidemic. The agency did not immediately provide details about any added funding for this work.

But it’s more than has been done by the agency in the past, some health experts said.