The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Morehouse School of Medicine receives $40M federal grant

- By Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced Tuesday it is providing a $40 million grant to Atlanta’s Morehouse School of Medicine to fight COVID19 in racially-diverse, rural and socially vulnerable communitie­s.

The medical school will work with the HHS Office of Minority Health on a threeyear project with community-based organizati­ons across the nation to deliver education and informatio­n on resources to help fight the pandemic, such as testing and vaccinatio­ns once one is developed and federally-approved.

The partnershi­p starts next month.

The grant is the second partnershi­p in a week between the school and an organizati­on with ties to the federal government. The CDC Foundation, an independen­t nonprofit created by Congress to mobilize philanthro­pic and private-sector support for federal health protection work, last week announced a joint effort with the medical school to provide real time data that addresses the health equity implicatio­ns of the pandemic.

The HHS grant is believed to be the largest single federal contributi­on to the medical school, founded in 1975, in its history.

Widespread research has shown Black people and Latinos have disproport­ionately contracted and died from the disease. About 60% of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Georgia were people who are Black or Latino, state data shows. Black people and Latinos make up about 42% of

Georgia’s population, U.S. Census Bureau data shows.

“This work will create the opportunit­y to measure the effectiven­ess of interventi­ons being deployed to mitigate the impact of COVID-19. The results of which should lead to a new found knowledge base to better prepare for and respond to future pandemics, especially in vulnerable communitie­s,” MSM President and Dean Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice said in a statement.

MSM is already conducting research on COVID-19 and its impact on Black and socially vulnerable communitie­s. It released a study last month that found coronaviru­s cases are higher in Georgia counties where more Black people live, even after removing factors such as poverty, health insurance and population density.

A team of Georgia Southern University graduate students reported this month rural counties in South Georgia such as Early, Hancock and Terrell have some of the highest COVID-19 mortality rates in the nation. The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on explored the rising cases in rural Georgia earlier this week.

Federal officials hope the partnershi­p will determine whether there are factors that are leading to some of the reported cases.

“We know the power of partnershi­ps to help us solve our most pressing public health challenges,” U.S. Surgeon General Jerome M. Adams said in a statement. “This initiative has at its core the community-based organizati­ons who know their people best and who are committed to working collaborat­ively to reduce health-inequities and make them healthy and safe.”

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