The Columbus Dispatch

Need Black participat­ion in vaccine trials

- Michelle Singletary Columnist

WASHINGTON – Vaccine trials need Black people. And the Black economic recovery needs a vaccine.

The economic downturn from COVID-19 has had a staggering financial impact on Blacks. Job losses from the pandemic have overwhelmi­ngly affected low-wage, minority workers. Black men and women are among those taking the longest time to regain their employment.

Black Americans account for about 13% of the U.S. population but 24% of coronaviru­s deaths, the Pew Research Center reported in June.

But when I ask the Black folks I know if they’re going to take a COVID-19 vaccine, most without hesitation say, “No, I will not.”

They all reference the infamous Tuskegee syphilis study, which started in 1932 with the recruitmen­t of 600 Black men. About half of the men in the initial study conducted by the U.S. Public Health Service had syphilis, but they weren’t given adequate treatment because the point of the experiment was to watch the progressio­n of the venereal disease. A government panel later found that the men weren’t told the true purpose of the experiment.

Others point to the case of Henrietta Lacks, a young Black woman whose cells were taken without her consent during a 1951 visit to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. Researcher­s found that Lacks, who died from cervical cancer that same year, had extraordin­ary cells, which have since been reproduced countless times for medical research around the world.

There are also “long-standing inequities in health care access and outcomes for black Americans compared with other racial and ethnic groups,” pointed out the Pew report.

So, yes, Blacks have a legitimate distrust of the medical profession. Half of Blacks said they would not be willing to take a newly developed COVID-19 vaccine, according to a poll by Kaiser Family Foundation and ESPN’S The Undefeated.

But Freeman A. Hrabowski III, the president of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC), and his wife, Jacqueline, want to change attitudes and save lives. The Hrabowskis, who are Black, volunteere­d for a Phase 3 clinical vaccine trial being conducted by the University of Maryland School of Medicine. They hope to serve as an example to show Blacks they can trust the science behind the rush to develop a COVID-19 vaccine.

“Our Black friends are surprised and worried that we’re in this trial,” Freeman Hrabowski said in an interview. “And our attitude is very different from that. We have a chance to work for the public good and to help people in general and African Americans to understand that we’ve got to be a part of this process if we want to make sure that all of the challenges involving every population have been addressed as they look for a safe vaccine.”

The trial the Hrabowskis are volunteeri­ng for was co-developed by scientists at the biotech firm Moderna and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Karen Kotloff is the principal investigat­or for the Maryland clinical trial and head of Infectious Disease and Tropical Pediatrics in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. Kotloff is keenly aware of the daunting tasks of getting a vaccine buy-in from Blacks. But it’s vital that trials have a good representa­tion of minorities, she said.

“If we’re developing a vaccine, we want that vaccine to be effective and safe in people who are at the highest risk of getting infection and getting severe disease from infection,” Kotloff said. “And that’s why it’s so important for those groups to be well represente­d in the same distributi­on that they are represente­d in the epidemiolo­gy of the disease.”

Part of the comfort the Hrabowskis have in participat­ing in the trial is the involvemen­t of UMBC alumna Kizzmekia Corbett, who is now a viral immunologi­st at the Vaccine Research Center. Corbett is the scientific lead on the NIH team working to find a vaccine for the coronaviru­s.

Corbett, who graduated from UMBC in 2008, won a spot in the university’s prestigiou­s Meyerhoff Scholars Program, which was co-founded by Freeman Hrabowski to increase diversity among science, technology, engineerin­g and math fields.

“Growing up in Alabama and having known about the Tuskegee study for so many years, I’ve always known we needed more people of color, more Blacks in the field in the research, doing the medicine and the science,” Freeman Hrabowski said.

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