Black Americans and COVID-19 Pandemic page is a tool to collect and share useful information and res
03/10/2025
This Tuesday, March 11 marks five years since the start of the pandemic in 2020.
Tuesday marks five years since the start of the pandemic in 2020, prompting lockdowns, social distancing and masking up.
09/29/2024
Attention!! Free Covid-19 tests are available again. Here’s how to get them | CNN.
The available tests also include an option with features that make it more accessible for people with disabilities affecting dexterity or vision to use. More information about ordering these tests is available at ACL.gov/AccessibleTests.
People in the United States can order more free Covid-19 tests from the federal government this fall as the country heads into respiratory virus season with high levels of the coronavirus already circulating.
09/27/2024
Attention!! Attention!!
Allowing any household to order up to four at-home COVID nasal swab kits through the website, covidtests.gov. The tests will begin shipping, via the United States Postal Service, as soon as next week
09/19/2024
Attention: Stop, Look, Listen and Mask-Up:
If you are looking for the new COVID-19 vaccine, it’s now available at CVS, Walgreens, Kaiser and Sutter Health. Sacramento County has a small supply of vaccines for those without insurance.
New COVID variant XEC appears in California. Here's what doctors are saying
Even with the new variant, the CDC recommends everyone six months and older get the new COVID vaccine. They say it's your best defense.
09/09/2024
Watch the discussion/debate:
Our health is important so join the discussion:
Word in Black (WIB) is excited to announce, “Debate Night in Black America: A Virtual Conversation,” an event designed to engage the African American community during the Sept. 10, 2024, presidential debate. This groundbreaking livestream show offers a platform for insightful discussion and analysis centered on Black viewers.
Word In Black is hosting a virtual conversation on September 10, 2024, before and after the ABC presidential debate, featuring commentary and perspectives from the African American community, as well as in-person participation in watch parties across the nation.
08/14/2024
Stanford's new book documents her experience during the pandemic, emphasizing her ongoing commitment to addressing the inequities that disproportionately affect marginalized communities.
ABC News sat down with pediatric surgeon Dr. Ala Stanford, who has operated on children, infants and sometimes fragile premature babies.
08/08/2024
Shortage of Black doctors is rooted in racist history − a $600M gift will help historically Black medical schools address the gap
Increased mistrust of the US medical profession and higher mortality rates are consequences of the low numbers of Black doctors. A massive gift to Black medical colleges may help build those numbers.
08/06/2024
California COVID surge is surprisingly stronger, longer-lasting than experts had expected
California's summer COVID surge has proved to be particularly strong and enduring, as it storms to levels not seen in summertime in over two years.
08/04/2024
COVID infections spreading in Oregon, Washington and California
Another COVID outbreak is sweeping parts of the country, with infections increasing on the West Coast. The summer spread has become a yearly trend as temperatures...
07/31/2024
COVID surging in California, nears two-year summer high. 'Almost everybody has it'
If it seems like many people around you are getting COVID-19, you're not alone. Coronavirus levels in California's wastewater are surging to levels not seen in summertime since 2022.
06/27/2024
The short reach of long COVID care--
Latinos and African Americans suffer the highest rates of long COVID. Yet health care inequality and poor outreach have resulted in clinics with mostly white patient lists.
Latinos and African Americans suffer the nation’s highest rates of long COVID. Yet systemic health care inequality and poor outreach have resulted in clinics with mostly white patient lists.
06/27/2024
Free All Political Prisoners –- Including Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning
The United States has many political prisoners, most of them elderly former members of the Black Panther Party whose willingness to resist racist police violence made them supreme enemies of the U.S. state, never to the forgiven.
In a racist society, it is the ferocity of the state’s pursuit and prosecution of dissidents that is the best measure of their contribution to the struggle against oppression. Although, in white supremacist societies, punishment of Black resisters to state power is always swifter and more barbaric than for whites, it is the intent and impact of the blows inflicted on the oppressor that should be the basis of solidarity. From that perspective, Julian Assange and his protégés have made common cause with Black revolutionaries in their zeal to lay bare the dictatorial nature of the omni-pervasive national security state and the sheer, racist barbarity of the U.S. imperial project.
The late Glen Ford (born Glen Rutherford; November 5, 1949 – July 28, 2021), was an American journalist, who, along with Bruce Dixon and Margaret Kimberley, co-founded Black Agenda Report
Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning paid a high price for revealing U.S. vicious criminality in Iraq. Their experiences are indicative of how far the state will go to silence anyone who reveals its true nature.
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Black Americans and COVID-19 Pandemic page is a tool to collect and share useful information and resources.
The CDC found that 33% of people who've been hospitalized with COVID-19 are African American, yet only 13% of the U.S. population is African American. Some local communities have found a similar pattern in their data. Among the many (26) states reporting racial data on COVID-19, blacks account for 34% of COVID deaths, according to research from Johns Hopkins University.
This disproportionate toll can be partially explained by the fact that there's a higher prevalence of obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes among African Americans compared with whites.
"Black workers are more likely to hold the kinds of jobs that cannot be done from home," Morial says. So, they may be more likely to be exposed to the virus, if they are working in places where it's difficult to maintain social distancing. In addition, he points to longstanding inequities in access to quality care.
"There also is bias among health care workers, institutions and systems that results in black patients ... receiving fewer medical procedures and poorer-quality medical care than white individuals," he says. He says an expansion of Medicaid into those states that still haven't expanded would be one effective policy to address these inequities.
The characteristics of the communities where people live could affect risk, too especially for those who live in low-income neighborhoods. The roots of chronic illness stem from the way people live and the choices that may or may not be available to them. People who develop the chronic illnesses that put them at higher risk of COVID-19 often lack access to affordable and healthy foods or live in neighborhoods where it's not safe to play or exercise outside.