South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

COVID-19 catastroph­es in Black communitie­s

Mother loses two children, both in their 20s

- By Skyler Swisher and Adelaide Chen

The new coronaviru­s shattered Monete Hicks’ world in a way she couldn’t imagine, killing two of her children before they even reached their 25th birthday.

The Lauderhill mother’s story illustrate­s the toll COVID-19 is inflicting on Broward County’s Black community.

Twenty of the 29 people under the age of 45 who have died with coronaviru­s in Broward County as of Friday are Black, far higher than their percentage of the population, according to a South Florida Sun Sentinel review.

Blacks make up nearly 70% of under-45 deaths in Broward County, the highest percentage of counties in South Florida. About 35% of the county’s under-45 population is Black.

“It is real. Take it seriously. Wear your mask. If you don’t have to go out, don’t go. If you are positive, let people around you know.”

Monete Hicks, Lauderhill mom who lost two kids to COVID-19

Hicks’ children — Byron Francis, 20, and Mychaela Francis, 22 — died just 11 days apart.

As protesters call attention to injustices in the criminal justice system, the pandemic is shining a light on longstandi­ng racial health disparitie­s, said Joseph West, a professor at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine’s Department of Public Health Services.

“Systemic racism is real,” he said. “Housing segregatio­n is real. Food deserts are real. It becomes compounded and generation­al.”

Blacks have higher rates of obesity, diabetes, heart disease, asthma and other underlying conditions that put them at a greater risk of dying of COVID-19, regardless of age.

What’s created that divide is a lack of access to health care, poverty, racism and distrust of the medical system, West said.

Older Americans are most at risk of dying from the coronaviru­s, but medical examiner records show that younger people are also dying. Almost always their deaths are accompanie­d by underlying conditions. The list of younger Black people who have died of COVID-19 includes a 38-year-old man with morbid obesity; a

35-year-old woman with diabetes, kidney failure, obesity, hypertensi­on and a heart muscle disease called cardiomyop­athy; a

22-year-old woman with obesity, diabetes, chronic kidney disease and a hardening of the arteries caused by chronicall­y high blood pressure; and a

35-year-old man with endstage kidney disease, diabetes and hypertensi­on.

Behind the statistics are people like Byron and Mychaela Francis.

Byron Francis loved to play video games and was affectiona­tely known by friends as “Big Teddy Bear,” his mother Monete Hicks said. On the morning of June 27, his sister, Mychaela, found him struggling to breathe, Hicks said.

He was taken to the hospital and died that day.

Then just three days later, Mychaela Francis went to the emergency room with shortness of breath and fever. Her condition worsened, and she died on July 8.

Mychaela worked as a cashier at Little Caesars and dreamed of designing clothing, Hicks said.

Hicks said the family had mostly stayed at home with the exception of a trip they took from June 12-15 to Universal Studios in Orlando. Byron Francis, though, didn’t join them at the theme park, she said.

“It is real. Take it seriously,” Hicks said. “Wear your mask. If you don’t have to go out, don’t go. If you are positive, let people around you know.”

Mychaela and Byron Francis both had asthma and obesity, according to medical examiner records.

The disparitie­s are not confined to Broward County. Of the 81 people under the age of 45 who have died with COVID-19 in South Florida, only seven were listed in medical examiner records as white, all others were Black, Hispanic, or Asian.

In Miami-Dade County, Blacks make up half of the county’s 28 under-45 deaths, despite making up only 18% of the population in that age bracket.

Statewide, Blacks make up 43% of Florida’s 137 under-45 deaths, despite comprising 32% of the state’s population in that age bracket.

The trend has been different in Palm Beach County, where Hispanics make up the majority of under-45 deaths.

One possible explanatio­n is Palm Beach County is home to poorer Latino communitie­s than neighborin­g Miami-Dade and Broward counties, said Dr. Terry A. Adirim, a senior associate dean for clinical affairs at Florida Atlantic University.

Two ZIP codes — Lake Worth Beach’s 33460 and Belle Glade’s 33430 — have emerged as coronaviru­s hot spots in Palm Beach County, she said. Lake Worth Beach has a large Guatemalan immigrant population, while Belle Glade is home to migrant farmworker­s.

The disparitie­s show that public health officials need to do more to reach and help people of color, Adirim said.

“At the end of the day, if you want to prevent death and severe illness, you need to go to those population­s most at risk,” she said. “These population­s are citizens, too, and they deserve to have resources focused on their areas.”

Delarie Lettsome, 52, a Sunrise resident, said she’s seen firsthand the issues in the Black community that are driving the higher death rate.

Black families often are crowded together in multigener­ational houses with grandparen­ts and siblings to make ends meet, she said. Tight budgets mean money isn’t available for doctor visits and healthy food.

Hourly work at grocery stores, restaurant­s and warehouses means people are exposing themselves to the virus instead of working safely at home.

“Black people need to be smart and realize that this virus is wiping us out,” Lettsome said during a walk at Plantation Central Park. “If wearing a mask is going to give me a fighting chance, I’m wearing one.”

 ?? CARLINE JEAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Monete Hicks, 48, of Lauderhill lost two of her six children, both in their 20s, to the coronaviru­s.
CARLINE JEAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Monete Hicks, 48, of Lauderhill lost two of her six children, both in their 20s, to the coronaviru­s.
 ?? CARLINE JEAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Monete Hicks,48, of Lauderhill, wears a mask with pictures of her kids she lost to coronaviru­s.
CARLINE JEAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Monete Hicks,48, of Lauderhill, wears a mask with pictures of her kids she lost to coronaviru­s.
 ??  ?? Mychaela Francis
Mychaela Francis
 ??  ?? Byron Francis
Byron Francis

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