The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Mounting U.S. deaths reveal an outsize toll on people of color

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As many as 215,000 more people than usual died in the U.S. during the first seven months of 2020, suggesting that the number of lives lost to the coronaviru­s is significan­tly higher than the official toll. And half the dead were people of color — Blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans and, to a marked degree unrecogniz­ed until now, Asian Americans.

The new figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention highlight a stark disparity: Deaths among minorities during the crisis have risen far more than they have among whites.

As of the end of July, the official death toll in the U.S. from COVID-19 was about 150,000. It has since grown to over 170,000.

But public health authoritie­s have long known that some coronaviru­s deaths, especially early on, were mistakenly attributed to other causes, and that the crisis may have led indirectly to the loss of many other lives by preventing or discouragi­ng people with other serious ailments from seeking treatment.

A count of deaths from all causes during the seven-month period yields what experts believe is a fuller — and more alarming — picture of the disaster and its racial dimensions.

People of color make up just under 40 percent of the U.S. population but accounted for approximat­ely 52 percent of all the “excess deaths“above normal through July, according to an analysis by The Associated Press and The Marshall Project, a nonprofit news organizati­on covering the criminal justice system.

“The toll of the pandemic shows just how pervasive structural racism is,” said Olugbenga Ajilore, senior economist at the Center for American Progress, a public policy organizati­on in Washington.

Earlier data on cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths revealed the especially heavy toll on Black, Hispanic and Native Americans, a disparity attributed to unequal access to health care and economic opportunit­ies. But the increases in total deaths by race were not reported until now; nor was the disproport­ionate burden on Asian Americans.

With this new data, Asian Americans join Blacks and Hispanics among the hardesthit communitie­s, with deaths in each group up at least 30 percent this year compared with the average over the last five years, the analysis found. Deaths among Native Americans rose more than 20 percent, though that is probably a severe undercount because of a lack of data. Deaths among whites were up 9 percent.

The toll on Asian Americans has received far less attention, perhaps in part because the numbers who have died — about 14,000 more than normal this year — have been far lower than among several other groups. Still, the 35 percent increase in Asian American deaths is the second-highest, behind Hispanic Americans.

In an average year, somewhere around 1.7 million people die in the United States between January and the end of July. This year the figure was about 1.9 million, according to the CDC.

Of the possible 215,000 additional deaths above normal through July — a total that has since risen to as many as 235,000 —- most were officially attributed to coronaviru­s infections. The rest were blamed on other causes, including heart disease, high blood pressure and other types of respirator­y diseases.

The CDC has not yet provided a breakdown by race and ethnicity of the deaths from other causes. The newly released data is considered provisiona­l and subject to change as more informatio­n comes in. Certain categories of deaths — suicides or drug overdoses, for example — often involve lengthy investigat­ions before a cause is assigned.

The outbreak’s disproport­ionate effect on communitie­s of color is not limited to a specific region of the country.

The virus first hit urban areas on the East and West coasts. But according to University of Minnesota researcher Carrie Henning-Smith, disparitie­s have also been seen as the disease spread across the country to Southern and Western states with large rural population­s.

For example, Arizona reported almost 60 percent more Native American deaths so far this year compared with previous years, and New Mexico recorded over 40 percent more. Between

the two states, over 1,100 more Native Americans have died than normal.

Another surprise: Only about half of the Asian American deaths have been officially linked to COVID-19, lower than for all other groups. Jarvis Chen, a lecturer at Harvard University’s public health school, said Asian Americans may not be getting tested at the same rate as other groups, for reasons that are unclear, and that could result in some virus deaths being attributed to something else.

Dr. Namratha Kandula of Northweste­rn University echoed that theory. She also cautioned against generalizi­ng about the underlying health of Asian Americans as a whole, noting that they are a diverse group from many different nations and cultures.

“It’s not enough to clump them all together because it does not tell the whole story,” she said.

Charlton Rhee, whose parents came to the U.S. from South Korea, lost both of them to COVID-19 this spring as the virus surged in New York City.

His mother, Eulja Rhee, went out one day, and when she returned, “she told me someone had coughed in her face” as she was getting off a bus, said Rhee, a nursing home administra­tor in Queens. “She was wearing a mask, but it got into her eyes.”

She died in the hospital, just shy of her 75th birthday.

Rhee found out a day later that his father, Man Joon Rhee, had tested positive. “He had caught it from my mother,” he said. “His heart was broken. And he said to me that he wanted to know if it was OK to be with Mom.”

He stayed home, receiving hospice care, and died at 83.

“The Asian American community has suffered greatly during this,” and government officials provided little help, especially initially, Rhee said. Community associatio­ns had to step in with food drives, personal protective equipment and other help.

Racial disparitie­s in deaths predate COVID-19, and many forces combine to produce them:

⏩ Some communitie­s of color are more likely to have lower incomes and to share living space with larger families, increasing the risk of transmissi­on.

⏩ They have higher rates of health problems, including diabetes, obesity and lung ailments, the result of living in places where healthier foods are harder to get and the environmen­t is polluted. Those same factors can make them more likely to become severely ill or die from the coronaviru­s.

⏩ They are more often uninsured and tend to live farther from hospitals.

⏩ They are disproport­ionately incarcerat­ed, which has been linked to long-term effects on health.

⏩ Experts point to a long history of discrimina­tion that causes distrust of the health care system.

⏩ And people of color are more likely to fill essential roles that require them to keep going to work during the pandemic.

Dr. Sobiya Ansari, who works predominan­tly with Black immigrant cancer patients in New York City, worries when they miss or postpone radiation or screenings. Already, the city has seen double the number of Black deaths this year compared with previous years.

“If a storm hits and you’re safe inside your house, you’re safe,“she said. “Then there is a population of people that don’t even have umbrellas. The storm hits, and they’re just really swept away.”

 ?? Courtesy of Charlton Rhee via Associated Press ?? In this undated photo provided by Charlton Rhee, Rhee, a nursing home administra­tor from New York, stands with his parents, Man Joon Rhee and Eulja Rhee. Charlton Rhee, whose parents came to the U.S. from South Korea, lost both of them to COVID-19 as the virus surged in New York City. A joint analysis by The Associated Press and The Marshall Project found that Asian Americans join Black and Hispanic Americans among the hardest-hit groups, with deaths in each group up at least 30 percent this year.
Courtesy of Charlton Rhee via Associated Press In this undated photo provided by Charlton Rhee, Rhee, a nursing home administra­tor from New York, stands with his parents, Man Joon Rhee and Eulja Rhee. Charlton Rhee, whose parents came to the U.S. from South Korea, lost both of them to COVID-19 as the virus surged in New York City. A joint analysis by The Associated Press and The Marshall Project found that Asian Americans join Black and Hispanic Americans among the hardest-hit groups, with deaths in each group up at least 30 percent this year.

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