The Guardian (USA)

‘Long overdue’: lawmakers declare racism a public health emergency

- Maanvi Singh

Long before a white police officer killed George Floyd and sparked nationwide outrage, long before Covid-19 began killing Black people at twice the rate of their white counterpar­ts, doctors and health experts were raising alarms that systematic racism is itself a pervasive, deadly pandemic – one that kills both instantane­ously and insidiousl­y, burdens Black and Brown Americans with generation­al trauma, contribute­s to higher rates of infant mortality and heart disease, and even speeds up the ageing process.

Now, amid a national reckoning with entrenched inequality, lawmakers are finally hearing those alarms – and officially declaring racism a public health emergency. The city councils of Cleveland, Denver and Indianapol­is have voted to acknowledg­e a crisis. Officials in San Bernardino county, California, and Montgomery county, Maryland, have done the same. State representa­tives in Ohio and Michigan are looking to follow suit.

These declaratio­ns are “long overdue”, said Dr Allison Agwu, an infectious disease specialist and associate professor at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. As a physician on the frontlines of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Agwu said she had been amazed at how quickly the medical establishm­ent mobilized to develop diagnostic tests, and produce thousands of research papers seeking a treatment and vaccine. If the government can commit the same sorts of resources and funds to addressing issues of systemic racism, Agwu said, “That’s a start.”

The stark health disparitie­s in the cities and counties that have declared emergencie­s have been clear for decades. In Cleveland, the city where a white officer shot and killed with impunity 12-year-old Tamir Rice, Black infants are nearly three times as likely to die as white infants. Maternal mortality rates for Black women are two to three times greater compared to white women, and neighborho­ods where the majority of residents are Black have the highest rates of lead poisoning.

“Even as an elected official, when I’m driving, when the police drive up behind me – I feel a sense of nervousnes­s that comes over me, “said Basheer Jones, a Cleveland council member who introduced legislatio­n declaring racism a health crisis. “The trauma of seeing your children, your sons, your daughters, your wives being killed, in living color – that kind of stress … also plays a part in the ailments that affect our bodies.”

New urgency for longstandi­ng issues

In Cleveland, officials introduced the landmark resolution recognizin­g racism as a health emergency in early March, before the coronaviru­s pandemic had hit the city, and months before the demonstrat­ors against police brutality took to the streets nationwide. The moment has lent momentum to the effort, Jones said. “Getting support for this sort of legislatio­n isn’t easy … Now, everybody is on board.”

The language of these resolution­s adopted by different cities and counties has varied, but all of them are largely symbolic. They assign new urgency to longstandi­ng issues. “If you declare something an emergency, you’re also saying it’s imperative to address the problem,” Agwu said.

In San Bernardino, pastor Samuel Casey, one of the community leaders and activists who pushed the county to declare a crisis, said the move is an important first step. “I fought for this because I was just sick and tired of being sick and tired,” he said. “In some of our neighborho­ods, kids are birthed into the generation­al trauma of slavery, and they’re traumatize­d by systemic oppression.” By focusing on health, activists were able to capture all the racist institutio­nal and social structures that erode the wellbeing of Black and Brown people, Casey explained.

Decades of research back up their case. Police have fatally shot about 1,000 people a year in recent years, disproport­ionately killing Black people, as documented by the Guardian’s Counted project. The criminal justice system disproport­ionately jails African Americans and Latino people. Housing segregatio­n and racist housing policies have limited access to education and healthcare, and left minorities disproport­ionately exposed to toxic and cancer-causing chemicals in the water they drink, the air they breathe.

Amid the pandemic, a labor market structured by racism means that Black and Latino people working frontline jobs as nurses, grocery staff, cleaners and transit workers are disproport­ionately exposed to the coronaviru­s. “I’ve taken care of a number of coronaviru­s patients, and I’ve had frank discussion­s with my Black patients about their risks,” said Dr Jade PagkasBath­er, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Chicago Medicine. “And as a Black provider, I offer that perspectiv­e in a way that doesn’t feel as painful or threatenin­g.” But pervasive discrimina­tion within the medical system also contribute­s to bad health outcomes, she noted. “Black people aren’t believed when they’re in pain,” she said.

Discrimina­tion as a chronic illness

Mary Bassett, the director of the FXB Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard, who previously served as a New York City health commission­er, said race can also gradually erode physical wellbeing in less obvious ways. A growing body of research has found links between the chronic stress of experienci­ng discrimina­tion and health disorders; for instance, people who endure years of microaggre­ssions develop heart disease more rapidly. A study of Black women found that stress from frequent racist encounters was associated with chronic low-grade inflammati­on. Other research suggests that pregnant women who report high levels of discrimina­tion tend give birth to babies that have a lower birth weight.

Some researcher­s have also linked the constant stress of being marginaliz­ed to a phenomenon called “weathering” – which accelerate­s ageing on a genetic level. “Of course, the answer to all this is not sending everyone on a yoga retreat – though that wouldn’t be so bad. We still need to address the structural issues,” Bassett said. Doing so will probably involve a range of reforms across many different department­s of local government­s, she told the Guardian.

To that end, Somerville, Massachuse­tts

– along with declaring a public safety and health emergency – announced it would withdraw from a federal defense department program that provides military weapons to police department­s and committed to implementi­ng a 10-point plan to reform law enforcemen­t developed by US representa­tive Ayanna Pressley, a Democrat of Massachuse­tts. Cleveland lawmakers are planning to create a community advisory board to help shape legislatio­n to address health disparitie­s.

In San Bernardino, community activists plan to keep the pressure on officials to go beyond a ceremonial declaratio­n, by addressing not only the criminal justice and policing system that doles out “instant death” for Black men, Casey said, but also inequities in the education and medical system.

“Racism is a pandemic just like Covid-19 is a pandemic,” Casey said. “But we’ve been dealing with the coronaviru­s for, what, four months? We’ve had systematic oppression for 400-plus years.”

Kids are birthed into the generation­al trauma of slavery, and they’re traumatize­d by systemic oppression

Pastor Samuel Casey

 ??  ?? Members of the 1199SEIU union, the nation’s largest healthcare workers’ union, kneel for eight minutes and 46 seconds, during a vigil. Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters
Members of the 1199SEIU union, the nation’s largest healthcare workers’ union, kneel for eight minutes and 46 seconds, during a vigil. Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters
 ??  ?? Medical workers from the DC Nurses Associatio­n march in support of Black Lives Matter in Washington. Photograph: Win McNamee/Getty Images
Medical workers from the DC Nurses Associatio­n march in support of Black Lives Matter in Washington. Photograph: Win McNamee/Getty Images

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