Hey Boosters,
Here’s a quick thing before we get to our regularly scheduled program. If COVID-19 has got you stressed financially, we’ve put together some financial tips, specifically for young people impacted by the pandemic. You can also subscribe to our scholarships newsletter featuring chances to earn money for school by registering friends to vote, donating health supplies, fighting racism, and more. Sometimes it pays to do good.
Why COVID-19 Has Hit Black, Indigenous, And People Of Color Hardest
The current pandemic highlights racial health inequities that go far back. COVID-19 has hit Black communities, people of color, and low-income families the hardest, both in terms of health and finances. Black and Latinx Americans are twice as likely to contract and die from COVID-19 as their white neighbors. Native Americans have also been disproportionately impacted by the virus, making up over half of COVID-19 cases in New Mexico and one-third of deaths in Montana. Meanwhile, people of color are almost twice as likely to report job loss and economic hardship due to the pandemic, making it especially difficult to afford crucial products for health and hygiene this back-to-school season.
Read on to find out why COVID-19 has hit communities of color especially hard. Then, through DoSomething’s Healthier Us campaign, you can ensure students in your area have access to personal care and cleaning products to help them stay healthy and perform their best in school this fall.
1) Black and Latinx Americans are more likely to be employed in essential roles, increasing their potential exposure to the virus.
Black and Latinx Americans are also more likely to work low-wage jobs, with fewer protections like health insurance and paid sick time off. As for those who do have the luxury of sheltering in place, roughly 1 in 5 Black workers and 1 in 6 Latinx workers are able to work from home (compared to 1 in 3 white workers).
2) Black, Native, and Latinx Americans are more likely to be uninsured than other populations, making them less likely to receive preventative care.
While the CARES Act has allocated funds to cover COVID-19 treatment for uninsured folks, there are still limitations to how many providers are participating in the program and how long the funds will last. Meanwhile, the burden of out-of-pocket medical expenses (and long-term medical debt) discourage uninsured folks from seeking preventative care or treatment for chronic conditions like asthma, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer -- all of which cause an increased risk of severe COVID-19 illness.
3) Black Americans are more likely to have preexisting conditions that increase the risk of complications from the virus.
For example, a study from Princeton University found that Black children are twice as likely as other children to develop asthma because of where they lived. Neighborhoods with a majority of Black residents experienced more outdoor and indoor pollution from nearby highways and older homes. Residential segregation has long “trap[ped] minority children in unhealthy, polluted neighborhoods,” and it persists from a history of racial zoning, redlining, and exclusionary neighborhood covenants.
Black Americans also experience higher rates of diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure, and heart disease, and they can be traced to the inequalities in cost and access to fresh, healthy foods in communities of color. One multi-state study found that 8% of Black Americans live in a neighborhood with a supermarket, compared to 31% of white Americans.
Many people of color live in linguistically isolated households (a household where no one over the age of 14 speaks English “very well”), including about a quarter of Latinx Americans and 1 in 20 Native Americans. Even when non-English speaking folks seek out health care, linguistic barriers impact the quality of care they receive, their ability to get a proper diagnosis, and their understanding of treatment and discharge instructions.
5) Black, Native, and Latinx Americans are more likely to live in dense, multi-generational housing.
Black households are twice as likely to live in densely populated housing structures as white households, and Black workers are also more likely to live in multigenerational households. Due to growing Native populations and federal underfunding, there’s currently a housing crisis happening on tribal reservations, and it’s forcing Native Americans to overcrowd in multi-generational and multi-family homes. A lot of Latinx Americans live in similar conditions, with some California residents living in apartments shared by 10 or 15 people.
6) Black, Native, and Latinx Americans have less access to medical facilities and necessary medical supplies.
So-called safety net hospitals that primarily serve low-income patients and patients of color are operating with lower budgets and personnel than their private counterparts. A survey of Black health care workers at such facilities detail their lack of staff and medical supplies firsthand.
Even nursing homes with higher Black and Latinx residents have been twice as likely to be hit hard by COVID-19, and several of the affected facilities experienced under-staffing and a lack of protective gear.
Donate 5 Items to Help Students Stay Healthy and Perform Their Best in School COVID-19 has amplified racial inequities in the US and made it even harder for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) to afford products for health and hygiene this back-to-school season. Let’s Do Something about it. Finding this newsletter useful? Forward today's edition to a friend and encourage them to subscribe. Copyright © 2020, All rights reserved. Our mailing address is: 19 West 21st Street, 8th floor, New York, NY 10010 View in Browser | Help Center | Manage subscriptions | Unsubscribe |