COVID-19 has had a tremendous global impact and has taken the lives of many people. It has halted economies and disrupted our educational system. It has strained health care resources and has expedited health policy reforms. One particular impact of COVID-19 that troubles me as a minority provider is the disproportionate burden of illness and death among racial and ethnic minority groups. COVID-19 has further illuminated existing health disparities in our society.
Before becoming a neurosurgery resident at Massachusetts General Hospital, I played football at Florida State University and with the Tennessee Titans. My athletic experience taught me valuable lessons that apply to my life as a physician. One of those lessons is awareness. If an offense breaks the huddle with a new personnel grouping in a never-before-seen formation, as the safety on the defense, I have to be aware of this new wrinkle and call it out, so my teammates are ready to make a play.
If there is a new highly contagious infectious disease disproportionately disrupting and taking the lives of a specific subset of people in a never-seen-before fashion, as a black neurosurgery resident volunteering to help fight COVID-19, I have to be aware of this fact and call it out, so my health care and public health teammates are ready to make a play.
In my opinion, the delivery of hospital care is not the principal problem. Regardless of race, you will be treated with quality outstanding care if you enter the Massachusetts General Hospital doors of most hospitals in the US. Hospitals have the resources and providers to treat patients with COVID-19. Unfortunately, the problem is further upstream before a person becomes our patient. Here are some key points to consider:
- Emerging non-communicable diseases like hypertension, obesity, and diabetes are prevalent in minority communities, and these pre-existing conditions place this population at higher risk for contracting COVID-19 and developing life-threatening complications of infection;
- Living quarters are tighter in poor neighborhoods, which limits social distancing in these communities;
- Getting to work often involves public transportation, another close-proximity activity permitting easier human-to-human transmission; and
- Access and affordability of primary care physicians often are out of the reach for many of these families; thus, diagnoses can be missed, and the costs/effort to manage medical problems may be too much to bear given other financial demands.
How do we solve these problems? That is a complicated question. Key elements include evaluating social determinants of health, providing education and development to children and families, as well as income enhancements in these communities. Tracking equity measures, implementing quality improvement initiatives, building a culturally competent health care system and fostering and encouraging better relationships between clinicians and patients may also be solutions. No matter the methodology, a multi-layered approach between the health system stakeholders and affected communities will be at the core of the answer to this problem.
COVID-19 is hurting all of us; it just has shown a propensity to target more impoverished, underserved populations more. As in football, we see the COVID-19 opponent lining up to attack us with an offense we haven’t seen before. It’s our responsibility to be aware as a team, to respond to that attack, and defend our goal — in this case, the health of the most vulnerable members of our community.
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Myron L. Rolle, MD, MSc
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Mass.