Its time to rethink public health

[Music]

back in march of 2020

a colleague and i were debating whether

a new strain of coronavirus

called sars kovi ii would have a

measurable impact on u.s mortality

the media hype was building and he

thought this was going to be major

i was skeptical to prove the alarmist

stories wrong

i began downloading and analyzing daily

covet 19 debts on my laptop

well turned out i was wrong

a story without data is a myth but

data without a story are just a bunch of

numbers

i’m an epidemiologist getting to the

stories behind the data

is what attracted me to this field

building on that academic debate with my

colleague

i paired up with a team of researchers

and students at emory university

to track how social factors impact

covid19

across u.s communities together

we built the kovit 19 healthequity

dashboard

it’s an interactive data visualization

tool available to anyone

the data we track paint a very troubling

picture

of the u.s pandemic and our response

as americans we are disproportionately

dying

of covid19 only one in 25 persons on

this planet

is an american yet we account for one in

five of all kovid 19 deaths globally

how are we letting this happen in the

richest

most technologically advanced country in

the world

i believe some of the answer lies in a

tale of two counties

county a is a suburb and county b is a

neighboring city in the midwest

both have similar age and sex breakdowns

and in the past year

both counties recorded similar numbers

of covet 19 cases per capita

but county b has a death rate from covet

19

that is three times as high as the death

rate in county a

hearing that you might be surprised and

even question the data a little

what if i tell you that county b has a

riskier transmission environment

a more medically vulnerable population a

more strained health care system

and now what if i tell you that county b

has a larger share of african americans

and it is in this group that per capita

cases was highest

are you still surprised

this is not just the story of washington

and wayne county in michigan

where i was born this is a story line

playing out all across the united states

we all heard media reports of emergency

rooms and icus

filled with black and hispanic patients

at first

these reports confused me covet 19

is caused by a novel pathogen and

therefore

nobody should have immunity yet the

picture in hospitals and later the

statistics we tracked

suggested who was experienced a severe a

severe

outcome was not random

so then what are the factors that lead

to a severe

outcome for covet 19 in the united

states

factor one it starts with coming into

contact with the virus

people working jobs in nursing homes

home health care

factories and grocery stores where there

is no option for remote work

are more likely to be exposed to this

virus

black and hispanic americans make up a

large share of adults working in those

jobs

and when the economy reopened last

summer

we saw cases rise in these groups in

many states

factor two once infected several

underlying medical conditions can affect

one’s chances

of being hospitalized or dying from

covid19

conditions like obesity and diabetes the

conditions i studied prior to the

pandemic proved to be particularly

deadly

black hispanic and native americans are

more likely to have several of these

conditions

and as an aside it’s not our genetics

that really matter

for disparities in these conditions the

research shows that it’s social factors

like income education and access to

healthy foods that play a larger role

and that brings me to factor three

once someone experiences severe symptoms

from covid19

that person needs treatments that only

hospitals can provide

in a pandemic access to timely and high

quality healthcare

is a life and death issue

black hispanic and native americans are

less likely to be insured

and even when insured they are more

likely to live in areas with low

quality health care these three

contributors

to fatal covid19 outcomes cluster

in communities of color making some

americans vulnerable

multiple times over an effective

pandemic response means that we

acknowledge this as we allocate health

resources

it means that we allocate these

resources equitably

now equity is a term you’re probably

hearing a lot these days

and i get asked about the difference

between equity and equality

on the left hand side we have an equal

allocation system

in this system everyone gets the same

crate regardless of where one stands

you can see why that’s problematic on

the right hand side

we have an equitable allocation system

everyone gets the crate

needed to achieve the goal

equity is often discussed as a concept

grounded in fairness

and that’s important but equity is not

just about fairness in a pandemic

equity is about effectiveness

let’s take the u.s covet 19 vaccine

campaign

for example as a nation our first

priority was to protect americans

working

in high risk occupations and protect

americans

vulnerable to severe disease a public

health response that’s successful would

be proportionate to these needs

and by either measure virus exposure

or disease vulnerability we would expect

communities of color to be prioritized

yet three months into the vaccination

campaign

black and hispanic americans are lagging

behind

we hear a lot about vaccine hesitancy in

communities of color and certainly

that’s a contributing factor

but vaccine hesitancy alone can account

for this disparity

so beyond motivation to get vaccinated

let’s talk about

what it takes to get your shot in

america

you need internet access or a lot of

time to wait on the phone

to fill out complex forms and navigate a

fragmented appointment system

black and hispanic households are less

likely to have high-speed internet

you need to be able to get to a

vaccination center

in most of america that means owning a

car or knowing someone who does

black and hispanic households are less

likely to own a vehicle

and in the south they typically have

farther to travel to get to one of these

sites

and you need time off of work not just

to get

to the center but sometimes wait for

hours in line once there

thinking back to the types of jobs that

many black and hispanic

americans have time off of work is at

the discretion of the employer

and not the employee it can also come

with a financial hit

the emergent picture is one of multiple

intersecting

systemic barriers that predate the

pandemic

it’s about a history of social and

economic exclusion

that has impacted the access to

life-saving infrastructure especially

among

black hispanic and native americans

but what happened in some communities of

color early in the pandemic

was a warning sign for the entire nation

since last august cases and debts have

been rising

in rural america many of these

communities

which are predominantly white also

experience

high poverty a digital divide and

limited health care services

what i’ve described for you is not a

myth in which we are powerless

this story is backed by data that show

us where we’re falling short

beating this pandemic means that we

don’t blindly use

a one-size-fits-all approach and just

hope that it will work

beating this pandemic means that we use

the data

to guide us on how we best leverage our

vast technological

and financial resources to head on

address

the barriers we’ve been talking about

that’s equity

now some of you might be thinking that

the only kind of equity that directly

affects you

is the type that involves your line of

credit i’m going to ask you to think

again

because equity is not just about helping

the disadvantaged

if the virus continues at high levels of

circulation

we all have greater chance of coming

into a contact

with a new variant that threatens our

past progress

we all face the possibility of

intermittent economic

shutdowns and travel restrictions

if hospitals run out of beds or

ventilators

because of stretched healthcare capacity

that might affect your chances of

survival

should you ever have the misfortune of

needing these services

so why then do we leave equity to the

social justice warriors

why isn’t equity everybody’s business

where we go from here is in all of our

hands

it’s on all of us to drive conversations

on how and whether

we weave equity into a rethink of our

health policies our economy our schools

and our communities at large i call upon

the tedx community

to seize this critical moment in

america’s history

and imagine a new narrative for america

an america

with no fence an america in which all of

us can thrive

no matter where we live thank you

[音乐]

早在 2020 年 3 月

,我和一位同事正在讨论

一种名为 sars kovi ii 的新型冠状病毒是否

会对我们的死亡率产生可衡量的影响,

媒体炒作正在建立,他

认为这将是重大的,

我对此表示怀疑 证明危言耸听的

故事是错误的

我开始每天下载并分析

笔记本电脑上的 19 笔债务

事实证明我错

了 没有数据的故事是神话,但

没有故事的数据只是一堆

数字

我是流行病学家 了解

故事 数据背后

是吸引我进入这个领域的原因

建立在与同事的学术辩论

基础上

任何人都可以使用的交互式

数据可视化工具我们跟踪的数据描绘了美国

大流行和我们作为美国的反应的非常令人不安的画面

ns 我们正以不成比例的方式

死于 covid19 这个星球上只有 25 人中只有

一个是美国人,但我们占

全球所有 kovid 19 死亡人数的五分之一

我们如何让这种情况发生在世界上

最富有、

技术最先进的国家

我相信有些人 答案

在于两个县的故事,

a 县是郊区,b 县

是中西部的邻近城市

b 的 covet

19

的死亡率是 a 县死亡率的三倍

弱势群体

医疗保健系统更加紧张

,现在如果我告诉你 b 县

的非裔美国人比例更大,

而在这个群体中,人均

病例数 最高

的你是否仍然感到惊讶

这不仅仅是我出生

的密歇根州华盛顿和韦恩县

的故事这是一个故事情节

在美国各地上演

我们都听到了急诊

室和重症监护室

充满黑人和西班牙裔的媒体报道 患者

起初

这些报告让我感到困惑 covet 19

是由一种新型病原体引起的,

因此

没有人应该有免疫力 但是

医院的照片和后来

我们追踪的统计数据

表明谁经历了严重的

严重

后果并不是随机的

,那么因素是什么 这导致

covet 19 在美国的严重后果

一个因素是它首先

与病毒

接触 在没有远程工作选择的疗养院、

医疗保健

工厂和杂货店

工作的

人更有可能是 暴露于这种

病毒的

黑人和西班牙裔美国人

在从事这些工作的成年人中占很大比例

,当经济重新开放时 l 去年

夏天,

我们看到许多州的这些群体中的病例有所增加

因素二 一旦感染了几种

潜在的医疗状况,可能会影响

一个

人住院或死于

肥胖和糖尿病等 COVID19

疾病的机会 我在大流行之前研究的情况

被证明是特别

致命的

黑人 西班牙裔和美洲原住民

更有可能患有其中几种

情况

,顺便说一句,对这些情况的差异真正重要的并不是我们的基因

研究表明,

收入教育和获得

健康食品等社会因素发挥了更大的作用

, 一旦有人因covid19出现严重症状,这让我想到了三个因素

,该人需要只有

医院才能

在大流行中提供的治疗 获得及时和

高质量的医疗保健

是生死攸关的问题

西班牙裔黑人和美洲原住民

不太可能获得保险,

并且 即使有保险,他们也更有

可能住在该地区 由于

医疗保健质量低下,这三个

导致致命的 covid19 结果的因素聚集

在有色人种社区中,使一些

美国人

在有效

应对大流行病时多次受到伤害,这意味着

我们在分配卫生资源时承认这一点,

这意味着我们

现在公平地分配这些资源 这些天你可能经常听到一个术语

,我被问到左边的

公平和平等之间的区别

我们在这个系统中有一个平等的

分配

系统每个人都得到相同的

板条箱,无论一个人站在哪里

你可以明白为什么 这在右手边是有问题

我们有一个公平的分配系统

每个人都可以获得实现目标所需的板条箱

公平经常被讨论为一个基于公平的概念

,这很重要,但公平

不仅仅是关于大流行中的

公平 公平是关于有效性

让我们 以美国梦寐以求的 19 疫苗

运动为例,作为我们第一个

国家 旨在保护

从事高风险职业的美国人并保护

易患严重疾病

的美国人 成功的公共卫生应对措施

将与这些需求相称

,通过衡量病毒暴露

或疾病脆弱性,我们预计

有色人种社区将在三个月内得到优先考虑

黑人和西班牙裔美国人的疫苗接种运动中

落后了,

我们听到很多关于

有色人种社区对疫苗犹豫不决的消息,当然

这是一个促成因素,

但疫苗犹豫本身就可以

解释这种差异,

所以除了接种疫苗的动机之外,

让我们谈谈需要

什么 在美国拍摄

您需要互联网接入或大量

时间等待

电话填写复杂的表格并浏览

分散的预约系统

黑人和西班牙裔家庭不太

可能拥有

您需要能够获得的高速互联网 到

美国大部分地区的疫苗接种中心,这意味着拥有

ca r 或认识从事

黑人和西班牙裔家庭的人不太

可能拥有车辆

,在南部,他们通常需要

更远的路程才能到达其中一个

站点,

而且您需要下班时间不仅

可以

到达中心,而且有时

排队等候几个小时

回想一下

许多黑人和西班牙裔

美国人休假的工作类型

是由雇主决定的,

而不是员工的判断 它也可能

带来经济损失

新兴情况是其中之一 大流行

之前的多重交叉系统性障碍是

关于社会和经济排斥的历史

,它影响了获得

拯救生命的基础设施的机会,尤其

是在

西班牙裔黑人和美洲原住民中,

但大流行早期在一些有色人种社区发生的事情

是一个警告信号

自去年 8 月以来,整个国家的案件和债务

在美国农村地区一直在上升,

其中许多社区主要是 白人也

经历过

高度贫困 数字鸿沟和

有限的医疗保健服务

我为您描述的并不是

我们无能为力的神话

这个故事有数据支持,这些数据向

我们展示了我们在哪些方面存在不足

战胜这种流行病意味着我们

不要盲目地

使用一刀切的方法,只

希望它能够

战胜这种流行病,这意味着我们

使用数据

来指导我们如何最好地利用我们

庞大的技术

和财政资源来

解决障碍 我们一直在谈论

这就是股权,

现在你们中的一些人可能会认为

,唯一直接

影响到你的股权

是涉及你的

信用额度的股权,我会要求你再想一想

因为股权不仅仅是关于

帮助弱势群体

如果病毒继续以高水平

传播,

我们都有更大的机会

接触到威胁我们过去进步的新变种

我们都面临着

间歇期的可能性 经济

停摆和旅行限制,

如果医院

由于医疗保健能力不足

而导致床位或呼吸机用完,这可能会影响您的

生存

机会 不公平每个人的

业务我们从这里出发的地方都掌握在我们所有人的

手中

,我们所有人都应该推动关于我们

如何以及是否

将公平编织到重新思考我们的

健康政策我们的经济我们的学校

和整个社区的对话我呼吁

TEDX

社区抓住美国历史上的这一关键时刻,为

美国

设想一个新的叙事

一个

没有围栏的美国 一个无论我们住在哪里,

我们都可以茁壮成长的美国

谢谢