Historical Insights on Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), the 1918 Influenza Pandemic, and Racial Disparities: Illuminating a Path Forward

被引:87
作者
Krishnan, Lakshmi [1 ,2 ,7 ]
Ogunwole, S. Michelle [3 ,4 ]
Cooper, Lisa A. [5 ,6 ,8 ]
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Johns Hopkins Dept Hist Med, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
[2] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, Johns Hopkins Ctr Med Humanities & Social Med, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
[3] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, 2024 East Monument St,Suite 2-300A, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
[4] Johns Hopkins Ctr Hlth Equ, Baltimore, MD USA
[5] Johns Hopkins Univ, Johns Hopkins Ctr Hlth Equ, Sch Med, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
[6] Johns Hopkins Univ, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch Publ Hlth, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
[7] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, 2024 East Monument St,Suite 2-516F, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
[8] Johns Hopkins Univ, Sch Med, 2024 East Monument St,Suite 2-500, Baltimore, MD 21287 USA
关键词
PUBLIC-HEALTH; INTERVENTIONS;
D O I
10.7326/M20-2223
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is exacting a disproportionate toll on ethnic minority communities and magnifying existing disparities in health care access and treatment. To understand this crisis, physicians and public health researchers have searched history for insights, especially from a great outbreak approximately a century ago: the 1918 influenza pandemic. However, of the accounts examining the 1918 influenza pandemic and COVID-19, only a notable few discuss race. Yet, a rich, broader scholarship on race and epidemic disease as a "sampling device for social analysis" exists. This commentary examines the historical arc of the 1918 influenza pandemic, focusing on black Americans and showing the complex and sometimes surprising ways it operated, triggering particular responses both within a minority community and in wider racial, sociopolitical, and public health structures. This analysis reveals that critical structural inequities and health care gaps have historically contributed to and continue to compound disparate health outcomes among communities of color. Shifting from this context to the present, this article frames a discussion of racial health disparities through a resilience approach rather than a deficit approach and offers a blueprint for approaching the COVID-19 crisis and its afterlives through the lens of health equity.
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页码:474 / +
页数:9
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