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suck abstract from ncbi


10.1089/hs.2021.0031

http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/10.1089/hs.2021.0031
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34076499!ä!34076499

suck abstract from ncbi


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pmid34076499      Health+Secur 2021 ; 19 (S1): S14-S26
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  • Structural Racism and the COVID-19 Experience in the United States #MMPMID34076499
  • Dickinson KL; Roberts JD; Banacos N; Neuberger L; Koebele E; Blanch-Hartigan D; Shanahan EA
  • Health Secur 2021[Jun]; 19 (S1): S14-S26 PMID34076499show ga
  • The long, fallacious history of attributing racial disparities in public health outcomes to biological inferiority or poor decision making persists in contemporary conversations about the COVID-19 pandemic. Given the disproportionate impacts of this pandemic on communities of color, it is essential for scholars, practitioners, and policymakers to focus on how structural racism drives these disparate outcomes. In May and June 2020, we conducted a 6-state online survey to examine racial/ethnic differences in exposure to COVID-19, risk mitigation behaviors, risk perceptions, and COVID-19 impacts. Results show that Black and Hispanic individuals were more likely than White respondents to experience factors associated with structural racism (eg, living in larger households, going to work in person, using public transportation) that, by their very nature, increase the likelihood of exposure to COVID-19. Controlling for other demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, non-White respondents were equally or more likely than White respondents to take protective actions against COVID-19, including keeping distance from others and wearing masks. Black and Hispanic respondents also perceived higher risks of dying of the disease and of running out of money due to the pandemic, and 40% of Black respondents reported knowing someone who had died of COVID-19 at a time when the US death toll had just surpassed 100,000 people. To manage the current pandemic and prepare to combat future health crises in an effective, equitable, and antiracist manner, it is imperative to understand the structural factors perpetuating racial inequalities in the COVID-19 experience.
  • |Adult[MESH]
  • |Attitude to Health/*ethnology[MESH]
  • |Black or African American/statistics & numerical data[MESH]
  • |COVID-19/epidemiology/prevention & control/*psychology[MESH]
  • |Ethnicity/psychology/*statistics & numerical data[MESH]
  • |Health Services Accessibility/*statistics & numerical data[MESH]
  • |Healthcare Disparities/*statistics & numerical data[MESH]
  • |Hispanic or Latino/statistics & numerical data[MESH]
  • |Humans[MESH]
  • |Male[MESH]
  • |Middle Aged[MESH]
  • |Racism/*statistics & numerical data[MESH]
  • |Social Isolation[MESH]
  • |Socioeconomic Factors[MESH]
  • |Surveys and Questionnaires[MESH]
  • |United States[MESH]
  • |White People/statistics & numerical data[MESH]


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