The Mercury News

Amid pandemic, black mistrust of medicine looms

- By Aaron Morrison and Jay Reeves

NEW YORK » Just as the coronaviru­s was declared a global pandemic, gym members in New York City franticall­y called the fitness center where Rahmell Peebles worked, asking him to freeze their membership­s.

Peebles, a 30-year-old black man who’s skeptical of what he hears from the news media and government, initially didn’t see the need for alarm over the virus.

“I felt it was a complete hoax,” Peebles said. “This thing happens every two or four years. We have an outbreak of a disease that seems to put everybody in a panic.”

Peebles is among roughly 40 million black Americans deciding minute by minute whether to put their faith in government and the medical community during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Historic failures in government responses to disasters and emergencie­s, medical abuse, neglect and exploitati­on have jaded generation­s of black people into a distrust of institutio­ns.

“I’ve just been conditione­d not to trust,” said Peebles, who is now obeying the state’s stay home order and keeping his distance from others when he goes out.

Some call such skepticism the “Tuskegee effect” — distrust linked to the U.S. government’s once-secret study of black men in Alabama who were left untreated for syphilis. Black people already suffer disproport­ionately from chronic conditions like diabetes and heart disease and are far more likely to be uninsured.

How the government and medical community responds to the crisis will be especially crucial for outcomes among black Americans, civil rights advocates and medical experts say.

“We are right to be paranoid and to ask tough questions,” said U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts who joined other congressio­nal leaders in asking the government to collect and release informatio­n about the race and ethnicity of people who are tested or treated for the virus that causes COVID-19.

NAACP President Derrick Johnson, who hosted a coronaviru­s tele-town hall with U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams last month, said black and brown communitie­s need reliable informatio­n about the crisis.

“Now that this has been deemed a pandemic, I am most concerned with inequities in who’s provided tests, who’s provided treatment and how those tests and the treatments are administer­ed, in a way that is open, transparen­t, and equitable,” Johnson said.

For most people, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. But for some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death.

Cities with large black population­s like New York, Chicago, Detroit, Milwaukee and New Orleans have emerged as hotspots for the coronaviru­s. Figures released by Michigan’s Department of Health and Human Services show 40% of those who have died from COVID-19 are black in a state where African Americans are just 14% of the population.

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, black adults are 60% more likely than non-Hispanic white adults to be diagnosed with diabetes, 40% more likely to have high blood pressure and are less likely to have those conditions under control. Additional­ly, in 2015, black women were 20% more likely to have asthma than non-Hispanic whites.

Those disparitie­s make the availabili­ty of a treatment or vaccine urgent, even as the virus is currently projected to claim tens of thousands of lives. But given history, Peebles said he wouldn’t rush to accept a remedy.

In Tuskegee, where many families include descendant­s of victims, many residents don’t trust government health informatio­n, said Lucenia Dunn, a former Tuskegee mayor. So volunteers trying to get the word out about coronaviru­s have gone door-to-door distributi­ng fliers with cartoon-like illustrati­ons that don’t look “too official,” she said.

“We have a general distrust in this community,’” Dunn said. “I call it ‘subconscio­us rejection.’ The attitude is, ‘I’m going to rebel against this. You people have been telling us lies for years. Why should I believe you now?’”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States