New York Post

NY’S Rx IS ILLEGAL & IMMORAL

End ‘race factor’ for COV meds

- DR. JOEL ZINBERG

NEW York City’s and state’s department­s of health have reached a divisive and destructiv­e low. In new guidelines rationing scarce, lifesaving oral antiviral medication­s and the one monoclonal antibody preparatio­n that is effective against the Omicron variant of the SARSCoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19, they instruct providers to “consider race and ethnicity” and give preference to those who are “Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.” These directives are immoral, illegal and bear no relation to the science.

The city’s Health Advisory #39 directs providers to adhere to the state Department of Health’s prioritiza­tion guidance for utilizatio­n of these COVID-19 treatments that are in short supply. It asks providers to consider whether patients are immunocomp­romised, their age, their vaccine status and the number of risk factors (medical conditions) they have for severe illness.

The problem with the state’s guidance is the instructio­n that “nonwhite race or Hispanic/Latino ethnicity should be considered a risk factor, as longstandi­ng systemic health and social inequities have contribute­d to an increased risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19.” Hence, all other risk factors such as age, immune, and vaccinatio­n status being equal, “nonwhite” and “Hispanic/Latino” patients will be granted superior treatment access compared with whites.

Far and away the most significan­t factor associated with severe

COVID-19 disease and death is age. Taking the 18-39 age group as a reference (Risk Ratio of 1), the risk of death doubles for the 40-49 age group (RR=2.2), doubles again in the 50-64 group (RR=4.3), and reaches an RR of 6.7 for those 65-74. The RR tops out for those 85 and older at 10.6.

Double counting

Minority population­s are younger than the white population. But they suffer from more of the underlying medical conditions that are associated with severe COVID-19 illness.

These include: obesity, diabetes with complicati­ons and chronic kidney disease. The risk increases with more conditions.

While it is possible that “longstandi­ng systemic health and social inequities” could lead to an increased incidence of these conditions in minority communitie­s, race and minority status do not, on their own, lead to more severe COVID-19 disease. If discrimina­tion causes one the medical conditions, the condition itself should be counted in drug-distributi­on decisions. Crediting minority status and the medical condition is double counting. And counting minority status as a risk factor, when there is no resulting medical condition, is unfair and unwarrante­d.

Maximizing benefit

Discrimina­tion on the basis of race must meet the legal standard of strict scrutiny — the government must demonstrat­e its action addresses a compelling interest and is narrowly tailored to achieve that interest. Arguably, New York has an important interest in assuring that the limited supply of COVID-19 medication­s is allocated to maximize medical benefit. But New York’s guidelines are not even reasonably or rationally related toward achieving that end. They may direct the medicines toward minority patients and away from sicker, more vulnerable white patients who would benefit more.

This sort of discrimina­tory, politicall­y correct decision-making should not be tolerated. New York health-department bureaucrat­s should revise these guidelines immediatel­y or risk having them struck down in court.

Joel Zinberg, MD, is a senior fellow at the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute, an associate clinical professor of surgery at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in Manhattan and the director of Paragon Health Institute’s Public Health and American Well-being Initiative.

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