The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Pandemic taking hold in rural region of Alabama

- By Jay Reeves and Kim Chandler

HAYNEVILLE, ALA. » Sparsely populated Lowndes County, deep in Alabama’s old plantation country, has the sad distinctio­n of having both the state’s highest rate of COVID-19 cases and its worst unemployme­nt rate.

Initially spared as the disease ravaged cities, the county and other rural areas in the state are now facing a “perfect storm”: a lack of access to medical care combined with poverty and the attendant health problems, including hypertensi­on, heart disease, lung disease, kidney disease and diabetes, that can worsen the outcomes for those who become sick with the coronaviru­s, said Dr. Ellen Eaton.

“I think a lot of people fell into this idea that we were immune because we’re not in tight spaces like in New York and New Jersey, and we’re in wideopen areas,” said Eaton, who specialize­s in infectious diseases at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

But no longer. Lowndes and nearby poor, mostly black counties in rural Alabama are facing an increase in confirmed infections. Their outbreaks are also affecting urban areas, since many of the sick need to be transferre­d to city hospitals.

Less than 30 miles from the white-domed Capitol in Montgomery, Lowndes lies along the highway where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. led voting rights marchers from Selma to Montgomery in 1965. Today, it has a population of 9,700, and 220 have now tested positive for the virus.

Grim numbers

The surge in Lowndes and neighborin­g counties may be inextricab­ly linked to their demographi­cs — and thus their history as home to plantation­s where slaves grew the cotton that fueled the Confederac­y. About 75% of Lowndes’ population is African American, and nearly 30% live in poverty. Its jobless rate has surged to 26% as area manufactur­ing plants closed during the pandemic.

The problem can also be seen elsewhere in the rural Deep South, where a tally by John Hopkins University shows a heavy concentrat­ion of cases.

Black people have suffered disproport­ionately in the pandemic. An Associated Press analysis in April of available state and local data shows that nearly one-third of those who have died are African American, with black people representi­ng about 14% of the population in the areas covered in the analysis.

As can be seen in Lowndes, some health conditions that exist at higher rates in the black community make African Americans more susceptibl­e to the virus, and they also are more likely to be uninsured.

Alabama’s figures reflect that national picture. About 27% of the state’s 4.9 million residents are black, but African Americans represent 44% of the 590 who have died.

For most people, the coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness and lead to death.

County administra­tor Jacquelyn Thomas used her fingers this week to count off five elderly Lowndes residents who’ve died of the disease recently. She fears what will happen as the state loosens restrictio­ns even further, and the weather gets warmer.

“I worry about Lowndes County,” said Thomas. “I worry about what’s going to happen everywhere.”

Nearly a third of the state’s total cases came in the last two weeks as Gov. Kay Ivey loosened regulation­s meant to stop the spread of the coronaviru­s in order to revive the economy. The days since have included high school graduation ceremonies that drew thousands, packed beaches, reopened bars and churches, and plenty of bare faces unprotecte­d by masks.

Dr. Scott Harris, the state health officer, said the state saw its highest number of new cases since the pandemic began in recent days.

“We know a little bit of that has to do with increased testing, but I don’t think that explains all of it,” said Harris.

No hospital

With case loads increasing in areas including Lowndes County, which doesn’t have a hospital, patients are seeking health care in cities like Montgomery, which Harris said appears to be having “widespread” community transmissi­on of coronaviru­s on its own.

Montgomery Mayor Steven Reed last week announced that intensive care units in the city’s hospitals were filled or nearly filled. While Harris said hospitals have the ability to increase ICU capacity if needed, city officials said it should be considered a warning sign of the virus’s spread and urged people to be vigilant. Reed said he raised the alarm at the request of local health officials.

“It has not subsided. It hasn’t plateaued,” Reed said. “It’s not over. We haven’t won the battle with COVID-19 yet,” Reed said.

The Alabama National Guard has been sent into state nursing homes, which have been hit hard by COVID-19, to help with cleaning and training. Through an ongoing military partnershi­p, a 15-member medical team from Romania arrived Thursday help the state with COVID-19 support and share lessons learned from Europe, military officials announced. While many in the area Lowndes aren’t taking recommende­d steps to ward off disease, others are. Wearing a protective face mask at a convenienc­e store gas pump, Marvin Johnson jumped in his car as soon as a masked stranger approached. “I don’t want to get sick,” he said through a cracked window. Shenae Harris also wore a mask, but she is worried that a lot of other county residents aren’t covering their faces and aren’t making any attempt to stay 6 feet away from others, as recommende­d. “People are still having parties and get-togethers,” she said. Dr. Karen Landers, the district medical officer for the state, said health officials aren’t aware of any single place, like a nursing home, that is driving an increase in cases in the county. But Thomas, the county administra­tor, sees other worrying signs in the poor communitie­s around her. Like other places with high numbers of lower-income residents, multiple generation­s of families often live in small homes in the county, she said. Young people who tend to take fewer precaution­s against the virus go home despite the risk of infecting parents and grandparen­ts whose lives are more fragile, Thomas said. “Once it does, it’s too late,” she said. “It’s too late.”

“I think a lot of people fell into this idea that we were immune because we’re not in tight spaces like in New York and New Jersey, and we’re in wideopen areas.”

Dr. Ellen Eaton, a specialist in infectious diseases at the University of Alabama at Birmingham

 ?? JAY REEVES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Health care worker Tonya Wilkes works at a Lowndes County coronaviru­s testing site in Alabama.
JAY REEVES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Health care worker Tonya Wilkes works at a Lowndes County coronaviru­s testing site in Alabama.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States