The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Learn from pandemics of COVID-19 and racism

- By Tracey L. Henry Tracey L. Henry, M.D., is an assistant professor at Emory University School of Medicine. The views here are her own.

During this COVID-19 pandemic, systemic racism has been brought to the forefront in many aspects of society. On Monday, May 25, George Floyd was murdered after a police officer pinned him down at the neck for nearly 9 minutes. “I can’t breathe, I can’t breathe” he screams, reminiscen­t of Eric Garner’s and unfortunat­ely so many others’ last words. Deja vu, but yet I never become desensitiz­ed. The killings of Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor months earlier and now Rayshard Brooks adding to the body count and senseless loss of lives. The invisible is now visible. Because of technology, we are now seeing these egregious acts of violence emphasizin­g the need for change in America.

It is difficult to be a person of color in this country when your life is not valued. As a physician and a person of color, as any human with a soul, I am hurting and I am grieving. We are hurting, and we are grieving. We are struggling to breathe! In this time of shared suffering and solidarity, we need hope, and we need to heal.

When will America stand up?

First COVID-19 and now it’s the color of our skin. America is in denial and its silence and inaction is an injustice. As a society, we are reactive.

We don’t have to stop grieving each time these racial atrocities and police brutalitie­s occur, but we must stop being reactionar­y and start being proactive. We need collective action in our communitie­s and even in health care.

We all must speak out against these injustices. Let’s advocate for safety and justice for our communitie­s. All communitie­s, black, brown, white and every race and ethnicity in between should stand together. Black and brown people cannot do it alone.

We know the problem. Let’s discuss solutions. Maybe George Floyd’s death is the catalyst we need for change. You’re either a racist or an antiracist. No longer can members of the majority watch idly as if it doesn’t affect you; it does affect you. It affects all of us.

In fact, racism is a public health crisis. Structural racism is the origin of many health-related issues both physical and mental, such as hypertensi­on, depression and post-traumatic stress disorders. In persons of color, we see it manifested in our increased rates of maternal mortality, especially in Black people, inequities in health care access, heart disease, still-higher death rates and lower survival in those stricken with most cancers and recently the disproport­ionate rate of death in those suffering from COVID-19. We are even seeing inequities in our medical educationa­l systems where our future health profession­als work and learn. In all of these cases, racism is still pervasive, and we must be a voice to the voiceless.

So how do you change these conversati­ons into accountabi­lity?

Well, we need action, and we need change. We need restructur­ing of our judicial system. We need restructur­ing of our educationa­l system. We need restructur­ing of our health care system.

Some say we don’t see color. We love all people, but that is simply not true. We all can’t help but to see color if we are not blind, the difference is we don’t all assign a value to it.

George Floyd’s death has spoken new life into a movement — and I can only hope and pray this is a true tipping point in American history.

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