Times Standard (Eureka)

Vulnerable US Latino communitie­s hit hard

- By Regina Garcia Cano, Anita Snow and Bryan Anderson

GUADALUPE, ARIZ. » A Hispanic immigrant working at a fast-food restaurant in North Carolina is rushed to the hospital after she contracts COVID-19. A sickened Honduran woman in Baltimore with no health insurance or immigratio­n status avoids the doctor for two weeks and finally takes a cab to the hospital and ends up on oxygen.

As the coronaviru­s spreads deeper across America, it’s ravaging through Latino communitie­s from the suburbs of the nation’s capital to the farm fields of Florida to the sprawling suburbs of Phoenix and countless areas in between.

The virus has amplified the inequaliti­es that many Latinos endure, including jobs that expose them to others, tight living condi

tions, lack of health insurance, mistrust of the medical system and a greater incidence of preexistin­g health conditions like diabetes. And many Latinos don’t have the luxury of sheltering at home.

“People simply cannot afford to stop working,” said Mauricio Calvo, executive director of the Latino Memphis advocacy group in Tennessee.

In many areas, Latinos comprise a dramatical­ly higher percentage of the positive COVID-19 tests compared to other racial and ethnic groups.

About 65% of positive tests in the county that is home to Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, are Latinos even though they make up just 6% of the population. With many infected families living in the same housing unit with no other place to go, Chattanoog­a officials are exploring a plan to provide alternativ­e sites at hotels or other locations for residents who need to isolate but can’t afford to move out and live elsewhere.

The same disparitie­s exist across the country.

Latinos account for 45% of coronaviru­s cases in North Carolina, where they make up only 10% of the population, according to the state’s Department of Health and Human Services. In the Latino and Native American town of Guadalupe,

Arizona, residents are testing positive at more than four times the rate of the entire county. The ZIP code with the most COVID-19 cases in Maryland borders the nation’s capital and is majority Hispanic.

Honduran native Arely Martinez, who now lives in Baltimore, delayed medical help for two weeks after getting a fever and headache, struggling to breathe and losing her sense of smell. Lack of insurance, her immigratio­n

status and misinforma­tion about the pandemic kept her home, but she finally went to the hospital and tested positive for COVID-19.

“I had no medical guidance, and apart from that, I was afraid because of the comments from people that when you go to the hospital, they would end up killing you,” said Martinez, who spent two days in the hospital fretting about her three children while her husband left them alone to seek work.

Her husband tested negative for the virus, but her sister, who was fetching their groceries, became ill. Her children were never tested.

“Truthfully, they were the saddest moments of my life,” she said. “There was not a moment or an instant that I stopped asking God to give me a chance to live to see my children, to hug them, to take care of them.”

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Roberto, 5, stands in their doorway in his pajama’s as his mother Arely Martinez carries in a bag of food in Baltimore on April 14.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Roberto, 5, stands in their doorway in his pajama’s as his mother Arely Martinez carries in a bag of food in Baltimore on April 14.

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