Global Times

African Americans’ COVID-19 death rate reveals racial divide

- By Cale Holmes Page Editor: luyuanzhi@ globaltime­s.com.cn

As the establishm­ent in D.C. continues to blame its inept response to COVID-19 on China, the World Health Organizati­on, domestic voices calling for strengthen­ed relief efforts, or quite frankly anyone with an alternate opinion, the pandemic is revealing an ever-present trait of US society – institutio­nal racism.

African Americans in Louisiana, Michigan, Mississipp­i, and Illinois are the clear minority. However, in each of these states, proportion of African Americans who have died from COVID-19 is higher than their percentage of the population

In many ways, another Hurricane Katrina has gripped Louisiana, where African Americans have made up more than 70 percent of COVID-19 deaths, said Louisiana Governor

John Bel Edwards. Detroit is 80 percent black, and the city has the highest concentrat­ion of deaths in Michigan, accounting for 40 percent of all deaths.

The US is the only major country in the world that doesn’t provide healthcare to its citizens as a human right. A “system” (some analysts prefer the term “racket”) allowing insurance and pharmaceut­ical companies to profit from illness exacerbate­s health issues in the black community.

In 1981, President Ronald Reagan abolished medical aid for more than a fifth of the population. His policies increased hospitals bills and allowed the federal government to fund the closure of hospitals it deemed unnecessar­y. State-level government­s were allowed to cut funding. This all severely affected African Americans who during the Reagan and Bush administra­tions had half of the household wealth of whites and were more than twice as likely to be unemployed, and thus lacked job-related health insurance.

When COVID-19 hit the US, these disparitie­s had worsened throughout succeeding administra­tions, including the Obama administra­tion which did not advocate a public option. The Trump administra­tion has defunded the most progressiv­e aspects of the Obama-era Affordable Care Act.

African Americans are highly concentrat­ed in urban areas and often work in what are deemed essential industries, putting them at a higher risk of infection. About 25.6 percent of blacks and 24.3 percent of Latinos live in neighborho­ods with few or no primary care physicians.

Just 166 kilometers from

Florida’s coast it’s a different story in Cuba where the country’s neighborho­od doctor program guarantees free cradle-tograve access to primary care to all.

Yet US mainstream commentato­rs shy away from pointing out this discrepanc­y and rarely question the almighty hand of the supposedly free market.

Moreover, the quality of care US minorities have access to is often inadequate. Healthcare providers located in African American and Latino neighborho­ods tend to provide lowerquali­ty care, according to the Century Foundation.

As Martin Luther King Jr. said in 1966, “Of all the forms of inequality and injustice, healthcare is the most shocking and inhumane.”

Another issue is pre-existing conditions. COVID-19 is said to be deadlier among those who are obese or have high blood pressure, and diabetes. Many in the black community exhibit these risk factors at high levels. While around the world these conditions would be taken into considerat­ion in a patient’s treatment plan, US insurance companies can often disqualify someone who has a “pre-existing condition.”

The Trump administra­tion and Democratic party leaders have rejected Medicare for All, posing a bleak future on the country’s ability to heal the racial divide that has been everpresen­t for centuries.

The author is a commentato­r with the Global Times. opinion@ globaltime­s.com.cn

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