The Day

Murphy solicits community input on health disparitie­s

- By ERICA MOSER

— Addressing a group gathered outside at FRESH New London’s Mercer Street community garden, U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said there’s “not a lot of good news here when it comes to COVID and health disparitie­s. I mean, it’s all bad news.”

He pointed to the “troubling” early results on COVID-19 vaccines: As of March 22, 37% of white residents had received at least one dose compared to 20% of Black people and 16% of those who are Hispanic.

Jennifer Muggeo, deputy director of Ledge Light Health District, noted that the risk of death from COVID-19 for a 55-year-old Black man is the same for a white man in his 70s, “but our systems are not courageous enough to acknowledg­e that in our response.”

“Imagine if the energy we spent proving racism exists could be spent dismantlin­g it,” she said.

Fawatih Mohamed-Abouh, an epidemiolo­gist at Lawrence + Memorial Hospital, stressed the importance of recognizin­g the social determinan­ts of health, such as disproport­ionately worse job security, that lead to worse outcomes.

These health disparitie­s, and the fact that state and local officials are deciding how to spend billions of dollars coming to Connecticu­t through the American Rescue Plan, were the backdrop of Murphy’s roundtable on health equity.

“If we just spend that money the same way we’ve been spending money for the last 10 years in this state, what a waste. What a waste,” Murphy said.

The senator said he doesn’t “have the ability or bandwidth” to be as involved as he’d like in how Connecticu­t spends the federal dollars, so he’s picking his spots, such as a focus on kids and on summer programmin­g, but not necessaril­y summer school.

In the short run, Murphy said, he will work with the state to make sure the money is “spent on systems change, not just funding existing systems.”

At the roundtable, people from local nonprofits and the Health Improvemen­t Collaborat­ive of SECT, which has talked about racism as a public health risk since before the pandemic, shared how they’d like to see the money spent.

Reona Dyess, executive director of The Drop-In Learning Center and a city councilor, brought up a few ideas: expanding internet access, making sure parks are handicappe­d-accessible, and helping people start small gardens to grow their own fresh produce. She also talked about the struggle getting enough EpiPens for children served at the center.

Jeanne Milstein, director of human services in New London, said there needs to be accountabi­lity for how these dollars are spent, and that state agencies need to work together rather than operating in silos.

Murphy said he likes the idea of holding onto the flexibilit­y and adaptabili­ty that some agencies have been afforded during the pandemic, and trusting local partners.

“It was the grassroots, small nonprofits that were able to be flexible,” FRESH New London Executive Director Alicia McAvay said, but they often aren’t included in federal funding.

Laurel Holmes, director of community partnershi­ps at L+M, similarly said the pandemic highlights the way the work needs to happen from the bottom up, that we “don’t need more bureaucrac­y at the state level.”

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