The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Emory workers take knee for race, health issues Hundreds join ‘White Coats for Black Lives’ demonstrat­ion

- By Ariel Hart ahart@ajc.com

On Friday at 1 p.m. Jeremy Amayo, clad in his scrubs and white hospital coat, walked to a grassy quadrangle near Emory University Hospital and took a knee.

For eight minutes and 46 seconds, the length of time George Floyd lay under a Minneapoli­s policeman’s knee as he died, Amayo and several hundred doctors, nurses, physician assistants and other health care workers kneeled “in remembranc­e of George Floyd and countless others,” in the words of a flier that flashed around social media this week. The demonstrat­ion planned by an Emory medical student on Twitter struck a nerve and grew to include workers at seven hospitals across metro Atlanta. Emory didn’t organize it but offered support as the size became clear.

The organizers called it “White Coats for Black Lives” and say they did so for a reason. Racism isn’t just a human rights problem, they say; it’s destructiv­e to health and they see that on the front lines.

The deaths of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery came on the heels of the COVID-19 pandemic, a disease that growing evidence links to a disproport­ionate impact in black and Latino communitie­s. That is only one of the ways in which being black, Latino or Native American is associated with poorer health outcomes in the United States. Those communitie­s also suffer higher rates of chronic health conditions, such as diabetes and heart disease, and higher rates of maternal deaths.

Research suggests the racial inequities in health care go beyond the impact of poorer economic status and environmen­t on health, to the medical impact that comes just from experienci­ng racism. And it calls for public notice, the health care workers say.

“I mean, look no further than coronaviru­s,” said Dr. Johnny Jones, a gastroente­rologist who took part in the demonstrat­ion at Emory Decatur Hospital. “There definitely is some intersecti­onality in terms of life expectancy amongst black people relative to the majority.”

“We all have the same organs,” said Dr. Maneesha Agarwal, a pediatric emergency doctor who took a knee from home while caring for her young daughter. “But race and how you’re treated can result in a lot of difference­s in the hormones in the body, and how your organs grow and develop, even in utero. That can impact your own health.”

The stress factor

Nduka Vernon, a fourth-year medical student at Emory, will never forget the time a high school classmate in Mississipp­i called him the n-word, and laughed. This spring he watched the video of Ahmaud Arbery’s killing — like Vernon, Arbery was 25 — and once again felt the impact on a personal level.

“I saw the video,” he said. “I sort of put it off. Just tried to bury my emotions about it. It really came out, my anger and frustratio­n came out, when I was with my mom on Mother’s Day.

“While medical school is stressful for everyone, I think the added stress of being a minority in these profession­al settings, especially African American and dealing with the stereotype­s that come with skin color in this country, add stress. And on top of that have to see images of black people being targeted because of the color of their skin.”

According to the research of a team at the University of Michigan,

that stress has a physiologi­cal impact that grows over time. Scientists can measure the impact through the production of stress hormones and the developmen­t of high blood pressure and other precursors for heart attacks, as well as inappropri­ate immune responses.

In a research sample of patients of different demographi­c groups, it turned out those impacts hit black women worst, Dr. Arline Geronimus at the University of Michigan, found. She and her co-authors found that these difference­s aren’t accounted for by wealth: Non-poor black women were more affected by toxic stress than poor white women. They called it “weathering,” like constant wind wears down a rock.

“The weathering effects of living in a race-conscious society may be greatest among those Blacks most likely to engage in high-effort coping,” Geronimus wrote. Her findings have recently been cited as a possible reason for the high death rate among black women as compared to other women. Even educated, well-off black women die from pregnancy at rates much higher than white women. Causes of their deaths are often the types of vascular and cardiac conditions related to the stress hormones whose impact Geronimus investigat­ed.

Crisis lends hope

The good news, say Vernon and others, is that this moment of crisis lends hope.

The event that first-year Emory medical student Katie Sharma started organizing on Twitter after seeing a similar one in Philadelph­ia caught fire on social media. When it outgrew the space they were planning, Emory’s administra­tion stepped in and helped find locations at seven hospitals.

“It’s inspiring to see people — non-black people, quite honestly — embracing social justice,” said Dr. Jones, surveying the diverse crowd standing up from the long kneel in front of the Decatur hospital. “I think that’s a good start. And that’s a vital thing that we need to take place before we have true healing.”

Another step forward may be the order by the federal government this week requiring laboratori­es to report the race, ethnicity, age and gender of people tested for COVID-19. The marked racial disparitie­s in deaths from COVID-19 in the few places where it could be counted made headlines, but also shone a spotlight on how little attention had been paid to collecting good data.

Dr. Agarwal and Dr. Sheryl Heron, a researcher on injury and associate dean at Emory, hope the moment will lead to increasing interest in solutions to the health problems that disproport­ionately impact communitie­s of color.

Among the solutions is educating health care workers on implicit bias: Data shows health workers can dismiss black patients’ concerns about pain or symptoms. Another is addressing a patient’s ability to afford trips to medical care and the drugs a doctor tells a patient to take.

Heron was working in the emergency room Friday afternoon and couldn’t take part in the demonstrat­ion, she said, but she was glad to see it. “What I hope is this is not going to be a one and done,” she said.

‘There definitely is some intersecti­onality in terms of life expectancy amongst black people relative to the majority.’ Dr. Johnny Jones gastroente­rologist

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Several hundred doctors, nurses, physician assistants and other health care workers kneel “in remembranc­e of George Floyd and countless others” during a demonstrat­ion Friday near Emory University Hospital.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Several hundred doctors, nurses, physician assistants and other health care workers kneel “in remembranc­e of George Floyd and countless others” during a demonstrat­ion Friday near Emory University Hospital.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? The demonstrat­ion planned by an Emory medical student on Twitter grew to include workers at seven hospitals across metro Atlanta. Emory didn’t organize it but offered support as the size became clear. Organizers say racism isn’t just a human rights problem but is also destructiv­e to health.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM The demonstrat­ion planned by an Emory medical student on Twitter grew to include workers at seven hospitals across metro Atlanta. Emory didn’t organize it but offered support as the size became clear. Organizers say racism isn’t just a human rights problem but is also destructiv­e to health.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States