Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Black clergy, nonprofit to start anti-covid effort

- ELANA SCHOR

“We are focused on really closing the opportunit­y gap for communitie­s of color around the city, and we’ve certainly seen in covid-19 the profound disparitie­s and impact on the Black community.” — Sheena Wright, CEO of United Way of New York City

NEW YORK — Black clergy leaders are joining forces with the United Way of New York City for an initiative designed to combat the coronaviru­s’s outsized toll on Black Americans through rampedup testing, contact tracing and treatment management.

Details of the new effort, shared with The Associated Press in advance of its launch today, rest on harnessing the on-the-ground influence of church leaders to circulate resources that can better equip Black Americans in safeguardi­ng against and treating the virus. Its rollout will begin in five major cities with initial seven-figure funding, focusing on expanded testing and public health education, with a goal of further expansion and ultimately reaching several hundred thousand underinsur­ed or uninsured Black Americans.

The Rev. Calvin Butts, pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church in New York City, said churches were stepping forward to serve as a “first line of defense” for the Black community.

“I’m delighted to say we are strongly together across denominati­onal lines and, even when there may be political difference­s, we still stand shoulder to shoulder in meeting this crisis,” Butts said.

The Black community has been hit hard, with an August study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finding that African Americans had a virus hospitaliz­ation rate 4.7 times higher and a death rate 2.1 times higher than the white population.

Sheena Wright, CEO of the United Way of New York City, highlighte­d that impact in describing plans to help boost the partnershi­p’s technical and fundraisin­g capacities.

“We are focused on really closing the opportunit­y gap for communitie­s of color around the city, and we’ve certainly seen in covid-19 the profound disparitie­s and impact on the Black community,” Wright said, pointing to a historic “lack of investment in health institutio­ns” that serve Black Americans.

The virus testing is set to start in January in New York, Detroit, Atlanta, Washington and Newark, N.J. Among the clergy helping to spearhead the effort are the civil rights activist the Rev. Al Sharpton and the Rev. Raphael Warnock, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta and a Democratic Senate candidate in Georgia.

Funding support will come from the testing company Quest Diagnostic­s and Resolve to Save Lives, a nonprofit-backed public health initiative led by Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during the Obama administra­tion.

The project is modeled in part on the strategy used by the National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS, founded in the 1980s to battle another epidemic that disproport­ionally hit Black Americans. The coronaviru­s initiative will involve the establishm­ent of leadership roles at participat­ing churches with responsibi­lity to coordinate testing, tracing and connection of virus-positive people with health care, said Debra Fraser-Howze, founder of the AIDS commission and a partner in the new project.

The coronaviru­s struggle “is similar to the AIDS epidemic” in that the Black community has “been again left out, locked out of resources,” Fraser-Howze said. “We have the highest rates of death and illness. So it is time for those that lead us to understand what is going on.”

 ?? (AP file photo) ?? People line up in April at Gotham Health East New York, a covid-19 testing center in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
(AP file photo) People line up in April at Gotham Health East New York, a covid-19 testing center in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States