The Oklahoman

RACE Race DATA data

- Contributi­ng: Aleszu Bajak, USA TODAY

shows that the share of vaccinatio­ns among Black people in those states is smaller than the number of cases among Black people in all 16 of those states, and smaller than their share of deaths in 15 states.

Similarly, Hispanic people accounted for more deaths and cases than vaccinatio­ns in most of the states.

Data on American Indians, Alaska Natives and Pacific Islanders is missing.

“We are losing our language speakers. We are losing our elders who carry the stories and the songs,” Echo-Hawk said. “The other place where they’re being lost is the data, because they are not being captured by their race and ethnicity correctly within the data, either when they go into the hospital systems, when they are diagnosed with COVID – and then when they die.”

‘We cannot improve what we’re not willing to measure’

The Biden administra­tion has created a COVID-19 Health Equity Task Force as part of an ambitious pandemic relief plan that promises an expansion of “equity data collection.”

In a White House press briefing Monday, task force chair Dr. Marcella NunezSmith discussed the effect of the lack of data on communitie­s of color and equitable vaccinatio­n.

“As of Jan. 30, we’re missing 47% of race and ethnicity data on vaccinatio­ns,” Nunez-Smith said. “Let me be clear: We cannot ensure an equitable vaccinatio­n program without data to guide us. ... But I’m worried about how behind we are. We must address these insufficient data points as an urgent priority.”

Nunez-Smith said several factors are to blame, including uneven rollout among states and “inconsiste­nt emphasis on equity in the early days of vaccinatio­n.”

The We Must Count Coalition wrote letters imploring the Trump and Biden administra­tions to invest in a public health data infrastruc­ture, pointing to the elusivenes­s of health data under America’s decentrali­zed health system. “We cannot improve what we’re not willing to measure,” the authors wrote.

State lawmakers including Democratic Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Edward Markey as well as Rep. Ayanna Pressley also recently called on the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to collect and release demographi­c data of vaccine recipients and prioritize hard-hit communitie­s.

“We urge you not to delay collecting this vital informatio­n,” the legislator­s wrote in their letter to Acting HHS Secretary Norris Cochran IV.

Dr. Rebecca Weintraub, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and a practicing internist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said improving data on vaccinatio­ns would help officials better track distributi­on.

“The data systems that we have now, there’s so little public data,” she said. “In order for equitable distributi­on, we actually need this level of transparen­cy now. Even if it’s incomplete. It helps us audit, it helps us support those states in a positive way versus reporting they’re not doing X. We want to help states get better, prepare better each week. But it’s difficult to do without access to this data.”

In a joint editorial published Friday in The Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n, two physicians called on systems to ensure health equity in vaccine distributi­on as hurdles are magnified in communitie­s already lacking health care access and other barriers.

“Communitie­s should be able to generate daily and certainly weekly data to understand the demographi­cs of who is being vaccinated. Local health department­s and health institutio­ns need to respond to these data in real time to identify where COVID-19 vaccine uptake is not matching COVID-19 disease burden,” wrote Dr. Muriel Jean-Jacques, Northweste­rn University Department of Medicine vice chair of diversity, equity and inclusion, and Dr. Howard C. Bauchner of the Boston University School of Medicine, a professor of pediatrics and community health.

“If disparitie­s emerge, then additional targeted approaches to vaccine outreach, education, and administra­tion, for example, house to house contact, may be necessary,” they said.

Black Americans are twice as likely as white people and Native Americans more than three times as likely to contract COVID-19. But different methods of how race data are collected in health settings – such as observatio­n upon intake, which might not be accurate, or self-reporting – coupled with a lack of uniform laws for race and ethnicity collection and reporting means those figures could be a gross understate­ment, Echo-Hawk said.

Race data was only reported from about half of more than 12 million COVID-19 vaccine recipients as of midJanuary, a CDC demographi­cs analysis published Monday found. Of those patients, 60% of were white.

Another CDC study published in August that found the high prevalence of the virus among American Indians could analyze data only from states that reported race and ethnicity more than 70% of the time. That was only 23 states.

Echoing that study, another on COVID-19 disparitie­s in underrepre­sented racial and ethnic groups noted that many hot-spot counties were missing data on race for a “significant proportion of cases.”

People of color have ‘been screaming’ for notice

The underrepor­ting of race and ethnicity data in health systems didn’t start with COVID-19.

For years, public health experts like Echo-Hawk and Crear-Perry have been advocating for better health data infrastruc­ture and mandates. The deficit in essential informatio­n has long hampered efforts to correct health disparitie­s.

Crear-Perry’s work at the National Birth Equity Collaborat­ive focuses on policy advocacy, training and research to improve Black maternal and infant health outcomes.

“We’re the worst in the world because we haven’t been counting it,” said Crear-Perry, referring to analyses that rank U.S. maternal care as the worst of any developed country. Just last year, the CDC released the first national data on maternal mortality since 2007.

“Health data disparitie­s are a huge, understudi­ed, massive barrier to the kind of work that we need to be doing to unmask health disparitie­s,” said Debra Furr-Holden, an epidemiolo­gist, C.S. Mott endowed professor of public health at Michigan State University and director of the Flint Center for Health Equity Solutions.

The researcher said reporting race and ethnicity data for vaccine distributi­on, as well as testing, should be required to ensure disaggrega­tion and accuracy.

In Seattle, Echo-Hawk remembers the time her own son, after suffering a leg injury, was misclassif­ied by a nurse as “white.” The nurse didn’t know “American Indian” was an option on the chart, she said.

“They call us the ‘Asterisk Nation,’ because there would be little asterisks that would say, ‘There’s not enough data in order to present’ or ‘not enough data to be statistica­lly significant,’ ” EchoHawk said.

Furr-Holden said she often feels she’s “standing on a mountain top screaming” about the importance of requiring data collection toward equity.

And she’s not the only researcher who feels that way.

“I’ve been doing this for a lot of years. I feel like I’ve been shouting and screaming to states, to those that collect data, large federal data sets, that we are being excluded in the data, that we’re being racially misclassif­ied,” EchoHawk said. “It’s limiting our ability to do good science ... the data is what is used for the allocation of resources. How are they doing that when the data doesn’t exist?”

 ??  ?? “Let me be clear: We cannot ensure an equitable vaccinatio­n program without data to guide us. ... We must address these insufficie­nt data points as an urgent priority,” said Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith, chair of the COVID-19 Health Equity Task Force for the Biden administra­tion. YALE UNIVERSITY VIA AP
“Let me be clear: We cannot ensure an equitable vaccinatio­n program without data to guide us. ... We must address these insufficie­nt data points as an urgent priority,” said Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith, chair of the COVID-19 Health Equity Task Force for the Biden administra­tion. YALE UNIVERSITY VIA AP
 ?? PROVIDED BY DR. JOIA CREAR PERRY ?? Dr. Joia Crear-Perry, a doctor and senior adviser to the We Must Count Coalition, has been advocating for better health data infrastruc­ture.
PROVIDED BY DR. JOIA CREAR PERRY Dr. Joia Crear-Perry, a doctor and senior adviser to the We Must Count Coalition, has been advocating for better health data infrastruc­ture.

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