The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Schools urged to tackle COVID-19 racial inequity

Plan aims to lessen harm to Black, Latino students.

- By Timothy Pratt timothy.pratt@ajc.com The Atlanta Journalcon­stitution and Report for America are partnering to add more journalist­s to cover topics important to our community. Please help us fund this important work at ajc.com/give

A group that includes researcher­s, a public health department director and a Georgia legislator has released a plan for schools nationwide to respond to COVID-19 with an eye toward minimizing harm to Black and Latino students and other population­s most affected by the pandemic.

Called the “Equity Schools Policy Plan,” the goal is to reverse what have been disproport­ionately high rates of negative outcomes from COVID-19 seen among children of color. This includes hospitaliz­ations: Hispanic children made up 36% of COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations and Black children, 21%, according to a study published this spring. Meanwhile, only 25% of U.S. children are Hispanic and 14% are Black.

The plan recommends schools adopt strategies such as temporary mask mandates, vaccinatio­n campaigns, scheduled testing and improved air ventilatio­n and filtration.

It suggests that schools give students five to ten KF94/ KN95/N95 masks twice a year, and require mask-wearing during COVID-19 surges as defined by “high” CDC community transmissi­on levels. Vaccinatio­ns should be offered at community events centered around families of students, and schools should conduct opt-out testing, or provide take-home tests.

Lead author and public health policy scientist Julia Raifman released the document online Aug. 15, several days after the CDC issued new COVID-19 guidelines. The effort has drawn signatures of support from 149 scientists, doctors, public health personnel, teachers and school nurses across the country. Raifman hopes the plan fills a vacuum left by the CDC revision, which includes relaxed quarantini­ng and social distancing recommenda­tions.

“We look to the CDC for policy guidance, and they should set a high bar — what evidence shows works, what’s important for equity. Unfortunat­ely, they haven’t done this. Given this, we developed policy guidelines to help state and local leaders,” said Raifman, a Boston University professor whose previous work includes overseeing a database detailing state COVID-19 policies.

State Rep. Rebecca Mitchell, D-snellville, also helped write the plan. Mitchell, who is an epidemiolo­gist, acknowledg­ed the challenges of implementi­ng the plan’s measures in Georgia, where policies such as mask mandates have drawn opposition.

“The political practicali­ties are pretty grim,” Mitchell

said. She noted that school systems in some states, such as Massachuse­tts, offered take-home COVID-19 tests to students. “The fact that this hasn’t happened here doesn’t make it less of a best practice,” she said.

“We need to be setting public health policy based on equity, rather than what’s popular,” Mitchell added.

Georgia School Superinten­dent Richard Woods did not respond to requests for an interview about the plan to “understand his reaction to its components,” and instead sent an e-mail statement supporting local school districts having “the flexibilit­y to respond to community needs.”

“We will continue to follow the recommenda­tions of the public health experts at the Georgia Department of Public Health,” the statement read.

Raifman observed that polls consistent­ly show a majority of Black and Hispanic people supporting mask-wearing in schools.

“We need to consider the people who are disproport­ionately affected” by COVID19, she said. That impact has not only been seen in hospitaliz­ation rates; another measure of the pandemic’s disproport­ionate affect on children of color is the loss of a parent or caregiver. One study released in late March estimates that 4,795 Black children across the state lost a parent or caregiver to COVID-19, the second-highest amount in the nation, after Florida.

Dr. Peter Rebeiro, professor of medicine in the division of infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, also supported the plan. He noted that lingering cardiovasc­ular, neuro- logical and cognitive conditions — part of what is called “long COVID” — are not completely understood, in children or adults.

“Without knowing the longterm risks, it seems like a good idea to mitigate as much as possible,” he said.

Dr. Stella Safo, HIV physician and founder of Just Equity for Health, a nonprofit organizati­on, said the plan’s measures would help reduce the outsized impacts of COVID-19 on children with disabiliti­es and chronic diseases, as well as Black and Latino students and their families. “What is happening is certain portions of our population­s are suffering more — they’re losing parents, missing work, perhaps suffering long-term disabiliti­es,” she said. “If everyone’s not impacted in the same way, how can we take measures to have more equitable outcomes?”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? State Rep. Rebecca Mitchell of Snellville, an epidemiolo­gist who helped write the equity plan, acknowledg­ed the challenges of implementi­ng it in Georgia, where such policies have drawn opposition.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM State Rep. Rebecca Mitchell of Snellville, an epidemiolo­gist who helped write the equity plan, acknowledg­ed the challenges of implementi­ng it in Georgia, where such policies have drawn opposition.

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