Morning Sun

State says racial disparitie­s of virus have diminished

- By David Eggert

LANSING» Michigan reported Monday that Black residents are no longer being disproport­ionately infected and killed by the coronaviru­s, after they accounted for a staggering 40% of deaths through much of the pandemic.

For the last two available weeks of data, African Americans represente­d 10% of COVID-19 deaths and 8% of cases. They comprise about 14% of the state’s population.

They still account for at least 38% of confirmed and probable deaths overall, and at least 20% of cases, according to state data. A patient’s race is not always reported.

Democratic Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II chairs a state task force that is addressing virus-related racial disparitie­s. He credited people of color for being more likely to wear masks and follow safety guidelines — because they were hit hard at the beginning of the outbreak — and said the disparitie­s’ downward trend has been holding for at least a month.

“We still need to be careful as we come into the fall, as we come into the flu season,” he told The Associated Press. “But thanks to the state of Michigan paying attention to this issue, prioritizi­ng this issue— we have themostmus­cular response to racial disparitie­s in the country — we can say that those disparitie­s have flattened. That’s a testament to people of Michigan and the work of the experts on the task force.”

Gilchrist, who is Black, has said he has lost 23 people in his life to the virus. Detroit, where he lives and which was an early hot spot nationally along with surroundin­g suburban areas, is 79% Black and accounts for 23% of Michigan’s 7,044 deaths related to COVID-19.

The state had spent about $ 4.1 million on advertisin­g in the majorityBl­ack cities of Detroit, Flint and Benton Harbor from April through mid- September — 63% of its overall $6.5 million in ads to curb COVID-19, said state health department spokeswoma­n Lynn Sutfin. It also has connected with pastors, radio hosts, celebritie­s, businesses and groups that are trusted in minority communitie­s.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said race and ethnicity are risk markers for underlying conditions that affect health — socioecono­mic status, access to medical care and increased exposure to the virus while working frontline, essential jobs.

Since August, the daily rates of new cases and deaths for Black residents has been equal to or lower than those for white people, according to the governor’s office. Over the sixmonth emergency, the daily case rate among Black people has been more than twice what it is among white residents. The daily death rate for Black residents has been nearly four times that of white people.

In the most recent twoweek period, the rate of new cases for Black people was about half that for white residents. The death rates for Black and white residents were about the same over those weeks.

School outbreaks

Also Monday, the state reported 27 new outbreaks at schools last week — 21 in K-12 buildings and six at colleges and universiti­es totaling 92 cases. There also weremore than 3,900 cases linked to ongoing outbreaks that were identified in previouswe­eks but had at least one new associated case.

Of the 4,000- plus ongoing or new cases, only about 200 were tied to K-12 schools. The rest were linked to universiti­es and colleges, including Michigan State (1,295 cases) and Grand Valley State (811 cases.)

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II, accompanie­d by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, right, speaks during an address to the state in Lansing, Mich.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II, accompanie­d by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, right, speaks during an address to the state in Lansing, Mich.

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