The coronavirus is having a heavier effect on African Americans, putting new attention on the disparities in their health and the socioeconomic factors that influence health.
"Data from Lexington-Fayette County Health Department released Thursday shows that roughly 30 percent of the county’s more than 188 coronavirus patients are black. Yet, black people are only 15% of Fayette County’s population," Beth Musgrave reports for the Lexington Herald-Leader.
"Moreover, black patients tend to get sicker than white patients with the highly-contagious respiratory illness, county health department data shows. Roughly 30 percent of black patients were hospitalized from complications from the virus compared to 13 percent of white patients, according to the data."
During a health-department online roundtable Thursday, "Devine Carama, a hip-hop artist and community activist, said higher poverty rates in the black population mean less access to health care and worse health outcomes," Musgrave reports. "Carama said when he was younger and poorer going to the doctor was a luxury he couldn’t afford."
Kentucky expanded Medicaid in 2014 to include people with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty threshold, which has reduced the share of uninsured Kentuckians to about 5 percent. But the Minority Health Status Report showed that nearly 9% of black Kentuckians ages 18-64 were uninsured in 2016. Hispanics in Kentucky even less insured; nearly 30% lack health insurance.
Having insurance "helps people manage chronic diseases such as diabetes, asthma and cardiovascular disease," and makes it more likely they will get screened for cancer, Musgrave notes.
“I think people think, ‘We’re family, we can visit’,” she said. “But you can’t do that.”
Preliminary figures show that 12 percent of the Kentucky deaths attributed to covid-19 were among African Americans, who comprise 8.3 percent of the state's population. Even greater disparities have been found in other states, and some places in Kentucky.
"Data from Lexington-Fayette County Health Department released Thursday shows that roughly 30 percent of the county’s more than 188 coronavirus patients are black. Yet, black people are only 15% of Fayette County’s population," Beth Musgrave reports for the Lexington Herald-Leader.
"Moreover, black patients tend to get sicker than white patients with the highly-contagious respiratory illness, county health department data shows. Roughly 30 percent of black patients were hospitalized from complications from the virus compared to 13 percent of white patients, according to the data."
Chart from 2017 Kentucky Minority Health Status Report |
Health inequalities between whites and blacks in Kentucky have existed since such things were first measured. "Black Kentuckians are more likely to die of asthma, have higher mortality rates for certain cancers and have higher rates of diabetes than whites," Musgrave notes, citing the health-equality office in the state Department for Public Health.
She notes that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says underlying health conditions such as diabetes and lung disease can make people more likely to develop covid-19 from the coronavirus, and points out these findings in the 2017 Kentucky Minority Health Status Report :
- Blacks are more likely to die from asthma than any other race.
- The death rate for diabetes is higher among blacks than whites.
- Blacks have a higher death rate for diseases or conditions that affect blood flow to the brain.
- Blacks have a significantly higher death rate than whites for prostate, breast and colorectal cancer.
Kentucky expanded Medicaid in 2014 to include people with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty threshold, which has reduced the share of uninsured Kentuckians to about 5 percent. But the Minority Health Status Report showed that nearly 9% of black Kentuckians ages 18-64 were uninsured in 2016. Hispanics in Kentucky even less insured; nearly 30% lack health insurance.
Having insurance "helps people manage chronic diseases such as diabetes, asthma and cardiovascular disease," and makes it more likely they will get screened for cancer, Musgrave notes.
Kacy Allen-Bryant |
African Americans' culture can also get in the way, said Kacy Allen-Bryant, a public-health nurse who chairs the Fayette County Board of Health. “We don’t often go [to a doctor] when it’s in an early phase when many of the complications can be prevented,” she said during the online discussion.
Another cultural factor may have played a role in the pandemic, Allen-Bryant said: “We are very social,” typically attending Sunday family dinners and weekend cookouts, but now isn't the time.
“I think people think, ‘We’re family, we can visit’,” she said. “But you can’t do that.”
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