The Guardian (USA)

Covid-19 and police abuses have exposed an ugly truth about America: racism kills

- Robert Fullilove

Covid-19 has transforme­d the United States. It has forced the nation to confront an ugly truth about American life: racism kills. The pandemic’s path of destructio­n in New York City, for example, is heaviest in neighborho­ods that were already reeling from the impacts of obesity, diabetes, cardiovasc­ular disease and HIV/ Aids. These are also the neighborho­ods with the highest concentrat­ions of working poor and low-income Black and Latinx families. These are also the neighborho­ods with the highest concentrat­ions of unemployme­nt, low levels of education, and high rates of arrest and incarcerat­ion.

These are the neighborho­ods that housed the heaviest concentrat­ions of workers who were deemed “essential” by city and state government decree and who were at greatest risk for exposure to Covid-19 because their jobs required them to be in close contact with the general public. Tragically, bus drivers, subway workers and delivery personnel do not have the option of “working from home”. They typically have had to choose between remaining home and losing their jobs or working in settings with a high risk of exposure to the virus. Moreover, in many instances, those whose jobs did not carry health insurance delayed or avoided going to the hospital for fear that the cost of getting medical care would bankrupt them.

The global pandemic was by no means the first public health crisis to expose race/ethnic health disparitie­s, the term used to describe substantia­l difference­s in rates of morbidity and mortality between people of color and whites in the United States. HIV/Aids, the viral pandemic that was first observed by public health officials in the 1980s, remains a disease that is significan­tly more prevalent among Blacks in the US than whites. As noted by the Kaiser Family Foundation: “Although they represent only 12% of the US population, Blacks account for a much larger share of HIV diagnoses (43%), people estimated to be living with HIV disease (42%), and deaths among people with HIV (44%) than any other racial/ethnic group in the US”

With higher rates of diabetes, cardiovasc­ular disease, obesity and hypertensi­on, Blacks in the US have significan­tly lower life expectancy than whites. Public health researcher­s have long insisted that these disparitie­s are not the result of biological difference­s between members of different race/ ethnic groups. There is little to no evidence to support the notion that difference­s in genetics account for these conditions.

Geography plays a pivotal role.

When neighborho­ods have lower access to educationa­l opportunit­ies, healthcare, affordable housing or are characteri­zed by “food deserts” – that is, neighborho­ods with limited or no access to the ingredient­s for a healthy diet – residents will invariably lack access to the factors that contribute substantia­lly and meaningful­ly to good health.

Public health profession­als who study health disparitie­s have long argued that the remedy for such disparitie­s is not access to healthcare alone, although such access is important. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has recommende­d that improvemen­ts in housing, education and employment opportunit­ies would have dramatic impacts on such disparitie­s. But while these recommenda­tions are universall­y acknowledg­ed to be significan­t steps toward solutions, the political will to finance such improvemen­ts has been lacking.

Yet the political winds seem to have shifted, at least partly. The Minneapoli­s police’s killing of George Floyd, and the mass protests and understand­able outrage that have followed, have led to new interest in policy ideas that until recently would have been dismissed as too radical. Many activists are calling to “defund the police” and use much of the funds normally allotted to policing – in most US cities the police receive the lion’s share of municipal budgets – to instead finance community improvemen­ts.

Most of these activists do not necessaril­y want to eliminate the police altogether. But they are asking us to reorient our thinking and recognize that many of the problems which police in urban areas are tasked with confrontin­g are the result of social inequities. If homelessne­ss, extreme poverty and untreated mental illness give rise to antisocial behavior, it is the police who are called to manage the problem. Defunding the police has a simple logic: rather than finance the police to control the homeless, for example, use those dollars to improve housing and work to eliminate homelessne­ss altogether. Rather than financing the police to control the behavior of those suffering from mental illness, finance efforts to treat mental illness.

The twin crises of Covid-19 and police misconduct have exposed the tragic consequenc­es of racism in the United States. As we rebuild and reconstruc­t the nation after this pandemic and its economic consequenc­es, we must use this moment as an opportunit­y to repair some of the damage created 401 years ago when the first Africans to land on the shores of the Jamestown colony in Virginia were enslaved.

As a defense against the death and destructio­n of future viral pandemics, investing in the building of healthy communitie­s in the neighborho­ods that experience­d substantia­l Covid-19-related morbidity and mortality would not only improve the health and safety of neighborho­od residents, it would substantia­lly reduce the reservoir of infectious disease that threatens the health of all. Even the rich and powerful were not totally spared the ravages of this pandemic. For the first time in memory, the logic of eliminatin­g the health consequenc­es of the nation’s racist past can be understood as moving to improve the health of everyone.

Robert E Fullilove, EdD, is a professor of sociomedic­al sciences and associate dean for community and minority affairs at the Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

 ?? Photograph: Frank Augstein/AP ?? The police killing of George Floyd and the mass protests have led to new interest in policy ideas that until recently would have been dismissed as too radical.
Photograph: Frank Augstein/AP The police killing of George Floyd and the mass protests have led to new interest in policy ideas that until recently would have been dismissed as too radical.

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