From the Coalition on Human Needs (http://www.chn.org):
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted vast disparities in our health care system.
Death rates due to COVID-19 are the highest among Black and Indigenous people, followed by Pacific Islanders and Latinx people. Here’s what we need to do:
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) must formally declare racism as a public health crisis. And we need Congress to act swiftly to pass critical legislation introduced by Senator Elizabeth Warren and Representatives Ayanna Pressley and Barbara Lee, which is designed to implement anti-racist health care policy.
Go to https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/sign-the-petition-demand-congress-pass-the-anti-racism-in-public-health-act-and-address-racism-in-our-health-care-systems to join CHN and our national coalition to demand Congress pass the Anti-Racism in Public Health Act and address racism in our health care system.
People of color have higher rates of diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease than other groups, and Black children have a 500% higher death rate from asthma compared with white children. Black women are nearly four times as likely to die of pregnancy-related causes than white women, and Black people are six times as likely to be killed by police.
This much needed legislation would expand research and investment into the public health impacts of structural racism, as well as to require the federal government to begin actively developing anti-racist health policy. This bill would also create a “National Center for Anti-Racism” at the CDC to both declare racism as the public health crisis that it is and further develop the research base and knowledge in the science and practice of anti-racism.
The health of people of color has been devastated by widespread racism in our health care system for generations. We need to immediately address the unacceptable racist disparities in health care.
Thank you for all you do to demand accountability from our political leaders and to fight for the needs of the vulnerable, the sick and the poor.
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