Sen. Murray Outlines Roots of Systemic Racism, Inequality in U.S. Health Care
Today, Senator
"Our health care system has continually failed communities of color--and the COVID-19 pandemic provides a stark and tragic example. This report is a call to action. We can--and must--do better," said
The report details stark data illustrating how hard communities of color have been hit by the COVID-19 pandemic--such as the realities that Black people are 3.5 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than white people, COVID-19 accounts for 1 in 5 deaths in the Latinx community, and American Indian or Alaska Native patients are being hospitalized at more than four times the rate of white people. The impacts of COVID-19 have been particularly severe for people of color who have a disability, are older adults, have preexisting conditions, are LGBTQIA+, or are workers who earn low incomes. Through the personal stories of people like Edgardo--the son of a Latino meatpacker whose father struggled to recover and return to work after contracting COVID-19--the report also shows that these numbers are more than just data, but represent devastating realities for many people of color.
"Among many tragic lessons, the COVID-19 pandemic is an appalling reminder of the deep inequities entrenched in our country. The high rates of infection and mortality in communities of color are driven by health and economic systems that were built on foundations of abuse, discrimination, racism, and neglect that continue to hurt communities of color today," reads the report. "These inequities did not start with the COVID-19 pandemic, nor will they end when the virus is contained."
This report demonstrates that the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on communities of color is not a coincidence and that health disparities in the
Some of the report's 30 recommendations to
- Providing dedicated COVID-19 relief funding for communities of color.
- Requiring the
- Funding expanded testing and contact tracing efforts in communities of color.
- Protecting workers from exposure to COVID-19 on the job, by requiring that
- Creating a federal right to paid sick days and paid family and medical leave.
- Prohibiting any discrimination in health care system because of a person's race, color, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, age, or disability.
- Ensuring clinical trials are inclusive of people of color.
- Requiring anti-racist and anti-bias training for health care professionals and across health care systems.
- Provide support to Black, Latinx, Tribal, and other underrepresented people to train and pursue careers in public health and as health care providers.
- Building on the ACA to expand insurance coverage and make it more affordable.
- Reducing disparities in research funding rates and eliminating harassment in the sciences.
- Expanding coverage eligibility for immigrant communities.
- Bolstering public health departments' capability to address racial and ethnic disparities.
The full report, "COVID-19 & Achieving Health Equity: Congressional Action is Necessary to Address Racism and Inequality in the
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REPORT: https://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Disparities%20Report%20Final.pdf
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