Detroit Free Press

Stark racial health care disparitie­s found in state

Black people suffer poorest outcomes, analysis discovers

- Eleanore Catolico New York & Michigan Solutions Journalism Collaborat­ive

Michigan has more severe racial disparitie­s in its health care system than other Great Lakes states, with Black residents experienci­ng the poorest outcomes, a new national analysis shows.

In a scorecard released Thursday by the Commonweal­th Fund, Michigan placed 29th among 39 states examined in overall health care delivered to Black residents. Michigan also had “worse than average” health system performanc­e for white residents compared with other states.

In most states, white residents received the best health care. But in Michigan, Asian Americans/Native Hawaiians/Pacific Islanders experience­d the highest health system performanc­e, scoring in the 84th percentile among population groups nationally. Health care for the state’s white residents ranked in the 76th percentile.

The report by the nonprofit research firm assessed data based on 25 indicators of health care performanc­e, including health outcomes, access to health care and quality and use of health care services.

While health outcomes and health equity scores for Michigan’s Black residents were among the worst in the country, researcher­s and state health officials pointed out that disparitie­s across racial and ethnic groups are prevalent nationwide, even among states that performed among the best in the assessment.

“This is not a Michigan issue. This is a problem that is across the United States. Michigan, in many of these areas, is doing better than a lot of our neighbors and a lot of other states,” said Dr. Natasha Bagdasaria­n, chief medical executive for the state.

Ohio, Iowa and Minnesota have slightly better health care for Black residents but still had assessment­s that were below the nation’s average. Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin and Missouri scored even worse in health care quality.

Many states performed poorly when it comes to the health of women, mothers and babies, with high and increasing rates of maternal and infant mortality and inequities in pregnancy-related outcomes for Black and American Indian/ Alaska Native women. Mortality increased during the pandemic.

“This is not a Michigan issue. This is a problem that is across the United States . ... The areas in which we as a country are failing are on maternal and infant health.”

Dr. Natasha Bagdasaria­n, chief medical executive for Michigan

has its Republican pockets too, particular­ly Downriver where Trump drew 93% of his votes from the county in 2020, according to a review of election data compiled by the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology Election Data and Science Lab. But Trump found his most ardent supporters elsewhere. Of all municipali­ties in Wayne County, Grosse Pointe Shores delivered the highest vote share for Trump with 65% support. The small community on Lake St. Clair — home to the Edsel Ford family mansion — boasts the county’s highest median household income.

But it’s the state’s biggest city that could prove decisive this fall.

If the path to the White House runs through Michigan, then the path through Michigan runs through Wayne County, according to longtime Democratic operative Jonathan Kinloch. “And the superhighw­ay that runs through Wayne County is Detroit,” said Kinloch, who currently serves as a Wayne County commission­er and chair of the 13th District Democratic Party. He also served on the Wayne County Board of Canvassers in 2020 when the GOP members initially refused to certify the results and considered excluding Detroit from the vote total.

The upcoming presidenti­al election could hinge on whether Black voters in Detroit turn out, he said. “Michigan is red until Black folks turn it blue,” he said.

But with fractures in the Democratic coalition over Biden’s response to Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, turning out more Democratic votes in Detroit for the incumbent may be needed to make up for Democratic voters who stay home or skip the top of the ticket to protest the president’s support for Israel, according to Kinloch.

Biden’s support for Israel could unravel his 2020 coalition

Perhaps nowhere else in the U.S. illustrate­s more clearly the political fallout from Biden’s support for Israel than Wayne County. The county has the largest concentrat­ion of residents of Middle Eastern and north African descent of any county in the U.S., according to census data.

In the Democratic presidenti­al primary, some voted “uncommitte­d” to pressure Biden

to demand a permanent cease-fire. The “uncommitte­d” vote beat Biden in the primary in Dearborn, Dearborn Heights and Hamtramck, cities home to large Arab American and Muslim communitie­s.

For those who don’t have family or friends in the Middle East personally impacted by the violence, many Arab Americans have neighbors who do or have themselves lived under occupation, said state Rep. Alabas Farhat, D-Dearborn, in a January interview.

Biden’s foreign policy decisions present a challenge to repeating past efforts by Arab Americans in Michigan to turn out the vote for Biden, he said.

Farhat said he plans to remind voters of the sharp difference­s in Biden and Trump’s domestic policy vision, noting Trump favors a Muslim ban. But he hopes the Biden campaign does more to make those conversati­ons with

voters easier heading into the fall.

“Simply how bad the alternativ­e is, isn’t enough when the current reality, thousands of people that look like us are being murdered,” he said. Farhat later endorsed the “uncommitte­d” campaign in the presidenti­al primary to protest Biden’s Gaza policies.

Fears over second Trump presidency

But the possibilit­y of a Biden-Trump rematch has some voters fired up to prevent a second Trump term.

Aringtor Hicks, 62, of Canton Township, calls himself an independen­t but he typically votes for Democrats and has donated to Democratic campaigns in recent years. The last time he voted for a Republican president was 1984 when he said he supported Ronald Reagan. More recently, he wrote a check to Republican

John Kasich after the last election with a note urging him to consider running for president again.

Hicks — who went to college with $50 in his pocket and now works in property management — says he supports some of Trump’s fiscal policies. But Trump’s authoritar­ian rhetoric – such as his comment that he would be a dictator for “one day” — concerns him. “That scares me. That scares me,” he said. “And especially as a Black male, I don’t want to live in a regime like that.”

But Hicks doesn’t see other Black voters necessaril­y preventing Trump’s return to the White House. Citing “barbershop talk in the Black community,” he said he’s observed Trump gaining momentum among Black men with some heralding COVID-19 relief checks they received when Trump was in office and siding with the former president amid his mounting legal troubles.

Still, despite shifts in the Democratic coalition that could pose a challenge for Biden, Hicks foresees Trump losing the election. “I think at the end of the day, the suburban white women are going to come in and save the day,” he said.

Suzanne Lewis, 71, of Plymouth Township, another self-identified independen­t voter, is similarly troubled by the prospect of another Trump presidency. “I’ve never been in a position where I’ve been afraid that the person that gets into the office —and I’m not just talking president, I’m talking all of them — is reckless,” she said. She expressed staunch opposition to Republican efforts to restrict abortion access and ban books. “In my opinion, if a book’s been published and you don’t want your kid to read it, make sure you know what they are reading,” she said.

“Those are the issues that get to me,” she said. “And I’d really, really like to educate a few people on the Bill of Rights and how that works.” Lewis, who went to law school, has followed the legal drama of this election cycle closely such as a recent case before the U.S. Supreme Court over whether states could remove Trump’s name from the ballot.

The threat she sees Trump posing to the constituti­onal order was one of the many reasons she said she opposes the former president and voted for Biden in Michigan’s primary. “It’s as much against Trump as anything else,” she said.

 ?? ??
 ?? DAVID RODRIGUEZ MUÑOZ/DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? Citing “barbershop talk in the Black community,” Aringtor Hicks, 62, of Canton Township, says he’s observed Trump gaining momentum among Black men with some heralding COVID-19 relief checks they received when Trump was in office and siding with the former president amid his mounting legal troubles.
DAVID RODRIGUEZ MUÑOZ/DETROIT FREE PRESS Citing “barbershop talk in the Black community,” Aringtor Hicks, 62, of Canton Township, says he’s observed Trump gaining momentum among Black men with some heralding COVID-19 relief checks they received when Trump was in office and siding with the former president amid his mounting legal troubles.

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