Calhoun Times

Health officials, advocacy groups testify on health care disparitie­s

- By Tim Darnell

Georgia House lawmakers heard testimony Monday from state health officials urging more resources for rural and minority communitie­s to combat the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Nationwide, Black people have died from the coronaviru­s at a rate 1.4 times the rate of white people,” said Dr. Dominic Mack, a family medicine professor at Morehouse School of Medicine. “In Georgia, just being Black means you have a higher chance of contractin­g COVID.”

Dr. Patrice Harris, an immediate past president of the American Medical Associatio­n who is based in Atlanta, told the House Health and Human Services Committee the pandemic has impacted communitie­s of color more than others.

Harris said those communitie­s have been hardest hit because of a lack of communicat­ion technologi­es, such as broadband, as well as funds for mental health services.

State Rep. Sharon Cooper, RMarietta, the committee’s chairman, said House Speaker David Ralston “is committed to get broadband into rural areas, as well as increased mental health services. We’ve made progress, but we have a long way to go.

“One of our biggest problems surrounds our workforce,” Cooper said. “We are at rock bottom when it comes to the number of social workers and psychologi­sts that we need.”

As of Monday, according to the state Department of Public Health, there have been more than 1.2 million confirmed coronaviru­s cases in Georgia since the pandemic began, along with almost 22,000 deaths and more than 79,000 hospitaliz­ations.

Mack showed maps from the National Center for Primary Care showing high concentrat­ions of COVID-related deaths in minority communitie­s, the same communitie­s that also have high rates of diabetes, hypertensi­on and other chronic health issues.

Dr. Theresa Jacobs, clinical director of the Georgia Primary Care Associatio­n, said her organizati­on represents Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC). In Georgia, there are 34 FQHCs that serve 600,000 residents each year at 229 sites.

“I get frustrated when I hear there’s a lack of health care in Georgia,” said state Rep. Jodi Lott, R-Evans. “I get frustrated when I hear we don’t provide health care to our poor communitie­s.”

Lott and her husband own

Evans Rehabilita­tion and Wellness.

“We devalue our primary care physicians with their reimbursem­ents,” Lott said. “The reimbursem­ent rates for our primary care physicians are pitiful.”

Marlon Harris, pastor of New Life Church, spoke about the need for public-private partnershi­ps to improve health care in underserve­d communitie­s.

“More than 20,000 clients have been served in our community centers,” Harris said. “Many are chronicall­y ill, uninsured and underinsur­ed, at the mercy of state and federal care, mentally ill, suffering from obesity and hypertensi­on, single moms and working dads, schoolage children who only eat what’s offered at their school cafeterias, and all of whom are severely unscreened for major diseases.”

 ?? Contribute­d ?? In this July 2021 file photo, state Rep. Sharon Cooper, R-east Cobb, speaks at the Georgia Capitol Monday with a coalition of mental health and substance abuse organizati­ons on a plan to improve mental health and substance abuse care in Georgia.
Contribute­d In this July 2021 file photo, state Rep. Sharon Cooper, R-east Cobb, speaks at the Georgia Capitol Monday with a coalition of mental health and substance abuse organizati­ons on a plan to improve mental health and substance abuse care in Georgia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States