Bidens health-equity adviser on her approach to addressing the politicization of COVID and misinformation – Yahoo Finance
Posted: January 9, 2021 at 9:53 pm
When President-elect Joe Biden is inaugurated on Jan. 20, he will inherit responsibility for stopping a pandemic that has disproportionately killed Black, Indigenous, and Latinx people. So will Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith.
Nunez-Smith, a Yale professor, physician, and researcher who has long studied racial disparities in health, in November became a co-chair of Bidens transition task force on COVID-19. Last month, the President-elect named her to a prominent, newand historicrole in his upcoming administration, running a health equity task force focused on the pandemic. The task force is inspired by legislation introduced to the U.S. Senate in April by now-Vice President-elect Kamala Harris; her bill never made it out of committee, but has shaped the incoming administrations focus on the longstanding health inequities that have become so tragically and nationally visible this year.
We started with different levels of awareness at the beginning of the pandemic, about the legacy of systemic, structural racism and inequality and how that often manifests, Nunez-Smith told Fortune in an interview this week. It does feel different, now. There is this awareness.
Which is not to say that the problems shes taking on will be easy to address. Nunez-Smith is particularly worried about the rise of misinformation that is already complicating the nations vaccination effortsand the mistrust in science that has undermined even basic public health efforts to manage the pandemic, like recommendations to wear masks.
What is so difficult for me, as a physician and as a researcher, is just how hyper-politicized everything has been, she said on Tuesday evening, less than a day before a mob of President Trumps supporters stormed the Capitol building. What keeps me up at night is misinformation and disinformation, and just knowing how fast its moving.
Some of Nunez-Smiths core focus in the Biden administrations first 100 days will be on health equity relating to the sluggish vaccine rollout. That will include working with local and community leaders on education and outreach efforts to communities of color, and finding the right trusted messengers to combat the spread of misinformation to various groups. While she provided few specifics about what her job will practically entail, Nunez-Smith also said that ensuring equitable access to PPE and testing will be priorities for the nations pandemic response. (She will also be remaining at Yale, if temporarily stepping back from some of her responsibilities there.)
Story continues
In the following Q&A, which has been condensed and edited for clarity, Nunez-Smith also discusses what role for-profit companies can play in the pursuit of greater health equityand why it starts with collecting better data.
Fortune: Between your role as co-chair of the transitions COVID-19 task force and your upcoming role in the Biden administration, what are you focusing on right now?
Dr. Nunez-Smith: Everybody is laser-focused on getting to the other side of the pandemicand being able to send your children to school, being able to spend time again with loved onesbut theres so much between now and then. We have hope, and the vaccine is important, but we cant lose sight of the other things the President-elect has asked us all to commit to: at least 100 days of mask-wearing, and all the other public health practices that we have in our toolkit, like not yet gathering in large crowds. We know its a sacrifice, and we know people are tired of it. But we see whats happening in California. Our health care systems are just stretched too thin. And this is not just a matter of beds and medsits people. These are my colleagues, who are working tirelessly, who are exhausted, who were not honoring, quite frankly, when we dont wear a mask.
So were thinking about a lot of things heading into these last couple of weeks before theres a new federal administration, and trying to listen attentively to many stakeholders, including partners at the state and local levels and tribal communities, who have really been on the front lines.
So once January 20th comes and you become chair of President Bidens COVID-19 equity task force, what specifically will you be focusing on? What will your job entail?
One of the priorities is getting from vaccines to vaccination, and having a strategy where everyone in our country who wants a vaccine can get one, with equitable and timely access. Thats going to be a really high priority for us in the first 100 days. We need a whole-of-government approach to this [pandemic], and we have to prioritize both our response and our recovery, with things like PPE, testing, and vaccines.
But this isnt a task force that will exist forever. Im hoping we work ourselves out of a job pretty quickly. All of the work relating to sustaining equity in the long term wont be over; but when COVID-19 starts to feel like something in the rearview mirror, the task force will be able to transform to something else.
Black people and communities of color have some justifiable skepticism of vaccines, after a long history of medical mistreatment and ongoing lived experiences of systemic racism in health care today. How are you thinking about outreach and equitable distribution of the vaccine to wary and historically underserved communities?
Its important for us to acknowledge why theres this hesitancy. People are going to be skeptical of vaccines, particularly many in communities where there is a not-long-ago history of experimentation, and where there are daily, contemporary reminders of differential status and access. But not every person or group thats skeptical of vaccines has their skepticism rooted in the same things, not even for every person of color whos skeptical. So we need to be thinking about targeted messaging; different people have different questions and motivations, and our response is not one-size-fits-all in terms of the information people need.
The messenger providing this information is very important. By and large, we trust health care professionals, local leaders, community leaders; young folks might trust different kinds of influencers. We also have to make sure that trusted messengers have the answers to the questions they will be asked, rather than being silent because they dont know the answersbecause somebody will be happy to fill that void with misinformation.
What keeps me up at night is misinformation and disinformation, and just knowing how fast its moving. I wouldnt have predicted that in the throes of a national pandemic, where every day were setting a grim milestone worse than the day before, there would be actors pushing intentional misinformation, often targeted at the very groups that are suffering the greatest.
Youve focused on health equity for most of your career. In this past year, between the horrific statistics about the pandemics disproportionate toll on people of color and some high-profile individual tragedies like Dr. Susan Moores death, have you seen a fundamental shift in the level of public awareness about the racist disparities in health and health care, and the solutions that are needed?
Listen, for those of us whove been working in the health equity space, we could draw the maps on day one of where this [pandemic] was going to be the hardest-felt what neighborhoods, what zip codes. They often overlap with redlining maps. But there were so many others who couldnt. We started with different levels of awareness at the beginning of the pandemic, about the legacy of systemic, structural racism and inequality and how that often manifests by place and by race in this country. It does feel different, now. There is this awareness, in some an awakening, and in everybody a reckoning.
But what is so difficult for me as a physician and as a researcher is just how hyper-politicized everything has been. Its mind boggling. I just dont understand how a mask has become a political expression. One of our great tragedies of the pandemic is just how eroded many Americans trust isin not just government and institutions, but in science. Im hoping that, as part of the new normal, that we really restore trust in terms of what the role of government is, and also fundamentally in science and evidence and data.
What other health equity issues need more attention?
Because Im a researcher, Im such a nerd. We go where we have dataand I dont think its hyperbolic to say that the data we collect signals all our societal value. So I worry about, who is invisible in the data? Who doesnt have a champion?
It took so long for us to get data out of tribal communities, and to understand the impact of the suffering among Native and Indigenous people. We still have spotty data on what happens in our carceral system. If data is a metric of value, then we signal who we value, and who we dont, by who gets counted and who doesnt. We need to collect those datanot just to find disparity, but so we can target our actions and get to the outcomes that we want.
There are so many different pieces to providing more equitable health care to allthe need to combat racism within the medical establishment, the impact of policymakers, the socioeconomic factors like access to education and housingbut what is the role for business? What sorts of things should for-profit companies be doing to work towards greater health equity?
There is a lot that can be done in the business community, and Im inspired by just how many folks are raising their hands. Im hearing from folks who say, Our boardroom feels different now. Were having different conversations. For businesses that are in health care, how can we revisit incentives for wellness and health for more folks? I want that to be contagious; for C-suite and board conversations to really be driven by self-interrogation and for people to have an understanding that working towards advancing equity is good for business and good for the bottom line. You know, its good to have a healthy workforce.
We didnt get to this place of deep embedded inequity overnight, so we wont disrupt it all overnight. And instead of thinking that this is a question only for the government to think about, or for nonprofits and philanthropyno, this is everybodys work. But it is in everybodys interest to do that work. And I think it is being undertaken in earnest in many virtual boardrooms across the country.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
See the original post here:
Bidens health-equity adviser on her approach to addressing the politicization of COVID and misinformation - Yahoo Finance
- Teachers, public health prepare for educator vaccinations to start - WKOW - February 25th, 2021
- University of Toledo offering free mental health first-aid training - WTOL - February 25th, 2021
- Educators are key in protecting student mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic - Brookings Institution - February 25th, 2021
- Knox Co. Board of Health moves to monthly meetings, extends alcohol curfew to 12 a.m. - WBIR.com - February 25th, 2021
- Minnesota health officials ask students and families to take COVID-19 tests every two weeks - Minneapolis Star Tribune - February 25th, 2021
- Clinician to respond with CUPD officers to calls involving mental health crises - CU Boulder Today - February 25th, 2021
- Salem College refocuses its curriculum on health and leadership - Inside Higher Ed - February 25th, 2021
- NYS Health Commissioner Dr. Zucker slated to testify at budget hearing - NEWS10 ABC - February 25th, 2021
- We Must Change the Way We Measure Economic Health - The Nation - February 25th, 2021
- Worldwide Animal Health Industry to 2026 - Major Players Include Bayer, Elanco and Merck Among Others - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business Wire - February 25th, 2021
- Pandemic focuses funding on mental health, but advocates say more is needed: Coping through COVID - cleveland.com - February 25th, 2021
- Allegheny Health Network Begins Vaccination Clinics at Senior Living High Rise Residences Across the Pittsburgh Region - WFMZ Allentown - February 25th, 2021
- 3 Actions Health Systems Should Take Now to Bolster Telehealth - HealthLeaders Media - February 17th, 2021
- Tenet, Providence, other health giants band together to form new health data startup - FierceHealthcare - February 17th, 2021
- Western New York health officials puzzled by secondary role in COVID vaccinations - WGRZ.com - February 17th, 2021
- Notable Health seeks to improve COVID-19 vaccine administration through intelligent automation - TechCrunch - February 17th, 2021
- LMH Health, Heartland and health department share process for ensuring no COVID-19 vaccine doses go unused - Lawrence Journal-World - February 17th, 2021
- Missouri teachers send letter to state health director asking to be vaccinated now - WDAF FOX4 Kansas City - February 17th, 2021
- NMSU researcher: COVID-19 information causing negative impacts on mental health - New Mexico State University NewsCenter - February 17th, 2021
- Parents express concern over long-term mental health concerns for children - KTTC - February 17th, 2021
- Health Department and Mercy to host COVID-19 vaccine PODs; 5,500 shots to be given to community members 65 and older - KFOR Oklahoma City - February 17th, 2021
- NC counties with older populations, most health care workers lead in COVID-19 vaccine rollout - WGHP FOX 8 Greensboro - February 17th, 2021
- Local health departments likely to receive less vaccine for first doses in the coming weeks - WSIL TV - February 17th, 2021
- Portland Street Response Team, designated to respond to calls about mental health crises, hits the streets for the first time - KGW.com - February 17th, 2021
- Health officials seeking dog that bit person near Matoaka Woods in Williamsburg - WAVY.com - February 17th, 2021
- Council to look again at how mental health clinicians are embedded with Loveland police - Loveland Reporter-Herald - February 17th, 2021
- For Better Health During the Pandemic, Is Two Hours Outdoors the New 10,000 Steps? - The Wall Street Journal - February 14th, 2021
- Black and Hispanic Americans are most likely to miss health screenings due to COVID-19. A Penn physician is meeting the need. - WHYY - February 14th, 2021
- Japan Health Ministry says it has approved Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine - Reuters - February 14th, 2021
- Inside the Sabres: Mental health an area of focus during the pandemic - Buffalo News - February 14th, 2021
- COVID-19, other health scares cant keep hospital volunteer from wanting to help patients again - MLive.com - February 14th, 2021
- Minnesota couple's love keeps growing, in sickness and in health - Grand Forks Herald - February 14th, 2021
- Proposed health plan for S.D. farmers would fall outside state and federal regulations - KELOLAND.com - February 14th, 2021
- Baystate Health COVID patients drop below 100 for the first time in 4 months - MassLive.com - February 14th, 2021
- Californians with high-risk health conditions can soon get vaccinated. What proof will be needed? - San Francisco Chronicle - February 14th, 2021
- Virginia Beach Health Department warns of scams related to COVID-19 vaccines - wtkr.com - February 14th, 2021
- WNY residents with comorbidities and underlying health conditions prepare to get COVID-19 vaccine - WIVB.com - News 4 - February 14th, 2021
- Health Care Workers Hit Hard by the Coronavirus Pandemic - The New York Times - February 14th, 2021
- WHO Executive Board stresses need for improved response to mental health impact of public health emergencies - World - ReliefWeb - February 11th, 2021
- Board of Health extends curfew and social gathering limitations for two more weeks, questions surround the boards future - WATE 6 On Your Side - February 11th, 2021
- HDOH NEWS RELEASE: Hawai'i Department of Health Survey Shows Diverse Views of Pandemic and Responses - David Y. Ige | Newsroom - February 11th, 2021
- Health experts look for solutions to COVID-19 mutation - Wink News - Wink News - February 11th, 2021
- Still lacking support of public health, 5-Star program's benefits could soon become moot - Steamboat Pilot and Today - February 11th, 2021
- Millions in mental health assistance funds on the way to Northeast Missouri healthcare center - WGEM - February 11th, 2021
- A public option for health insurance could be costly in times of crisis - STAT - February 11th, 2021
- Mercy Health working to address disparities in COVID-19 vaccine rollout - WZZM13.com - February 11th, 2021
- Arkansas Senate OKs health care religious objections bill - Searcy Daily Citizen - February 11th, 2021
- Petco Health and Wellness Company Inc. to Provide Covid-19 Vaccination Payment for Partners - PRNewswire - February 11th, 2021
- Warriors' Stephen Curry credits health, strength for strong play this season: 'It's a good vibe right now' - CBS Sports - February 11th, 2021
- Pace of vaccination speeding as Novant Health hosts several clinics - WCNC.com - February 7th, 2021
- Josh Kushner-Backed Oscar Health to Seek IPO - Barron's - February 7th, 2021
- Epidemiological Alert: Candida auris outbreaks in health care services in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, 6 February 2021 - World - ReliefWeb - February 7th, 2021
- Health officials advise residents to be cautious this Super Bowl weekend - KIIITV.com - February 7th, 2021
- Kevin Durant pulled from game twice due to Health and Safety protocols - NBA.com - February 7th, 2021
- Health Department has given 840 COVID shots - Winchester Sun - Winchester Sun - February 7th, 2021
- Even when the pandemic is over, negative mental health impacts will persist - WATE 6 On Your Side - January 30th, 2021
- Health policy researcher Stephen Shortell to be inducted into Health Care Hall of Fame - Modern Healthcare - January 30th, 2021
- 3 big predictions for digital health in 2021 - Healthcare Dive - January 30th, 2021
- Nelson County Health System will operate clinic in Michigan, ND - Grand Forks Herald - January 30th, 2021
- Health Experts Agree that Reusable Coffee Cups are Safe During COVID Food Tank - Food Tank - January 30th, 2021
- Biden Moves to Expand Health Coverage in Pandemic Economy - The New York Times - January 30th, 2021
- Health Care Unions Find a Voice as the Pandemic Rages - The New York Times - January 30th, 2021
- L.A. and Oregon disclosing workplace outbreaks. Most Bay Area health officers wont. Why? - San Francisco Chronicle - January 30th, 2021
- Portland healthcare institutions work to build trust with BLM - Modern Healthcare - January 30th, 2021
- Enrollment in New Jersey's Health Care Marketplace Extended to May 15 - TAPinto.net - January 30th, 2021
- Mental well-being linked to better cardiovascular and overall health - Medical News Today - January 30th, 2021
- Emails show residents were overwhelmingly against Labrador health board appointment - KTVB.com - January 30th, 2021
- Biden Moves Cautiously on Health Care - The New York Times - January 30th, 2021
- Judge blocks Trump rule to limit health studies used for EPA regulations - Los Angeles Times - January 30th, 2021
- What is the impact of COVID-19 on children's mental health? - Montclair Local - January 30th, 2021
- When Covid-19 vaccines are about to expire, health care workers must scramble to make sure they are used - KEZI TV - January 30th, 2021
- Pandemic isolation puts strain on mental health in Wyoming - The Ridgefield Press - January 30th, 2021
- Duke Health's at-home COVID care seeing positive results - WRAL.com - January 30th, 2021
- We have got to stay the course: Knox County commissioners, public health officer speak on delayed health board vote - WATE 6 On Your Side - January 27th, 2021
- Local health departments respond to the initial launch of the W.Va. vaccine pre-registration website - WBOY.com - January 27th, 2021
- Austin Public Health is hiring 100+ temp positions for COVID-19 response support. Heres how to apply - KXAN.com - January 27th, 2021
- Minnesota health officials urge caution after discovery of COVID-19 mutation first found in Brazil - Grand Forks Herald - January 27th, 2021
- The Moderna COVID-19 (mRNA-1273) vaccine: what you need to know - World Health Organization - January 27th, 2021
- New Civic Impact Initiative to Help Improve Health and Prosperity for Vulnerable Populations - UT News - UT News | The University of Texas at Austin - January 27th, 2021
- Opinion | We Can Improve Health Care. It Just Takes Compromise. - The New York Times - January 27th, 2021