Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Racial disparitie­s on health agenda

Becerra would lead Biden’s push to fix a system that still fails many people of color.

- By Noam N. Levey

WASHINGTON — As President-elect Joe Biden prepares to tackle the devastatin­g COVID-19 pandemic killing thousands of Americans a day, he has given his health team another equally challengin­g task: rooting out entrenched racial inequaliti­es in American healthcare.

Led by California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, tapped by the incoming president to lead the Department of

Health and Human Services, Biden’s healthcare team is aiming for an ambitious agenda to reshape a system that still leaves millions of Black and Latino Americans with weaker insurance protection­s, less access to care and poorer outcomes.

The effort will face an early and critical test as the administra­tion seeks to blunt the calamitous impact the pandemic is having on communitie­s of color.

“COVID unmasked how serious many of these issues are,” Becerra said in an interview with The Times. “The camouflage that may have hidden some of these disparitie­s has been ripped away.... There is no excuse not to take them on.”

Becerra, if confirmed by the Senate, will be the first Latino to hold the nation’s highest healthcare post.

The challenge he and others on the Biden team face is immense. The coronaviru­s outbreak has devastated Black and Latino communitie­s, spreading not only disease and death, but also severe economic hardship.

Black Americans, for example, account for more than a third of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S., though they represent only about 12% of the population, according to a study of selected states and cities with data on COVID deaths.

Black and Latino Americans are also more likely to have lost a job or seen their income reduced during the pandemic than white Americans, a recent nationwide poll by the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation found. At home, Latino and Black parents are also facing a tougher time caring for their children amid the outbreak, the study revealed.

“This is a crisis that has fallen disproport­ionately on

communitie­s of color,” said Leon Rodriguez, who headed the Office of Civil Rights at Health and Human Services under President Obama. “That’s been an important reminder that bad health outcomes still disproport­ionately hit communitie­s of color.”

These disparitie­s have received scant mention from President Trump. Biden, by contrast, has made remedying inequality central to his planned pandemic response.

“For Black, Latino and Native Americans, who are nearly three times as likely to die from [the virus], COVID-19 is a mass casuality,” Biden said earlier this month as he introduced Becerra and other members of his healthcare team in Wilmington, Del.

In addition to tapping the former Los Angeles congressma­n and son of immigrants to lead Health and Human Services, Biden also set up a COVID-19 equity task force, to be headed by Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith, a primary care physician and founding director of the Eq

uity Research and Innovation Center at Yale School of Medicine.

“She will ensure that fairness and equity are at the center of every part of our response,” Biden said.

Biden isn’t the first president with a healthcare agenda aimed at racial inequality. Half a century ago, President Lyndon B. Johnson’s push to enact Medicare and Medicaid helped usher in the desegregat­ion of hospitals across the South and brought

health protection­s to millions of previously uninsured Black and Latino Americans.

More recently, the Affordable Care Act that Obama signed in 2010 fueled historic gains in insurance coverage and access to medical care for those communitie­s.

The share of Black Americans without health insurance dropped by nearly half following enactment of the law, for example, falling from almost 25% to less than 14%, according to data assembled by the nonprofit Commonweal­th Fund.

Even so, Obama rarely spoke publicly about these racial disparitie­s. That makes Biden’s decision to highlight their persistenc­e more notable, said Samantha Artiga, who directs the Disparitie­s Policy Project at the Kaiser Family Foundation. “What really stands out is this focus on centering the issue of health equity,” she said.

Becerra, too, noted the symbolic importance of Biden’s words.

“The fact that you have the most powerful person in the world — the incoming president of the United States — saying that under his watch he wants to tackle these health disparitie­s means the paradigm has changed,” Becerra said.

Becerra would bring to the federal health agency decades of experience working on these issues, including his advocacy for added protection­s for low-income Americans when the 2010 healthcare law, widely known as Obamacare, was being crafted.

At the time, Becerra led the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus and was a key lieutenant of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco).

“He was very focused on the most vulnerable and on racial disparitie­s,” recalled Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Oakland), who led the Congressio­nal Black Caucus during the healthcare debate a decade ago, and is pushing legislatio­n to boost federal support for medically underserve­d communitie­s.

Becerra and NunezSmith said the Biden administra­tion would launch an effort to improve the foundation­s of healthcare in communitie­s of color.

A top priority will be improving basic data on health disparitie­s. A striking example of this problem has emerged during the coronaviru­s crisis. Public health data are riddled with holes, Nunez-Smith said, because pandemic-related death records often don’t include basic demographi­c informatio­n.

“One of the greatest harms is the invisibili­ty of so many people in data,” she said.

The administra­tion also wants to enhance outreach to communitie­s of color so medical services such as diabetes care can get to patients who often don’t know how to seek out the services. And the Biden team will seek to boost the number of Black and Latino physicians, nurses and other medical leaders.

“We’re going to have more experts that look like the people we’re trying to reach,” Becerra said.

The new administra­tion will almost certainly have to contend with a backlash from Trump supporters and others who have rejected calls this year for a more honest reckoning with racism across American society.

But Becerra expressed hope that the simple message of helping more Americans access the medical care they need will break through.

“At the end of the day, it’s not a matter of giving something special to folks,” he said. “It’s a matter simply of making sure that everyone can get healthcare in this country.”

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? “COVID UNMASKED how serious many of these issues are,” Xavier Becerra says of unequal care.
Susan Walsh Associated Press “COVID UNMASKED how serious many of these issues are,” Xavier Becerra says of unequal care.

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