Publication | Open Access
Are Clinicians Contributing to Excess African American COVID-19 Deaths? Unbeknownst to Them, They May Be
68
Citations
5
References
2020
Year
Health Care DisparityImplicit BiasesPopulation Health SciencesHealth DisparitiesCovid-19 EpidemiologySocial Determinants Of HealthRacial DisparitiesAfrican AmericansCovid-19Clinical EpidemiologyPublic HealthVulnerable Patient PopulationRacial DisparityCovid-19 PandemicHealth EquityEpidemiologyTime-varying ConfoundingSocial EpidemiologyMedicineHealth DisparityAre Clinicians
African Americans are overrepresented among reported coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases and deaths. There are a multitude of factors that may explain the African American disparity in COVID-19 outcomes, including higher rates of comorbidities. While individual-level factors predictably contribute to disparate COVID-19 outcomes, systematic and structural factors have not yet been reported. It stands to reason that implicit biases may fuel the racial disparity in COVID-19 outcomes. To address this racial disparity, we must apply a health equity lens and disaggregate data explicitly for African Americans, as well as other populations at risk for biased treatment in the health-care system.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1