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    The Tennessee TribuneThe Tennessee Tribune
    Religion

    Government, Community and Faith-based Leaders Join Forces to Champion the Fight Against COVID-19

    Article submittedBy Article submittedMarch 9, 2021No Comments10 Mins Read
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    By: Darryl Sellers

    The new year has brought with it, more daunting challenges in the African American
    community’s fight against COVID-19. More transmissible variants of the coronavirus which have
    emerged are swiftly sweeping their way across the United States. This latest trend in the year-
    long pandemic is especially troubling for Black people who are 4 times more likely to be
    hospitalized and 3 times more likely to die of COVID-19 than white people.

    Despite these stark numbers, COVID vaccination rates for African Americans are among the
    lowest of all ethnicities. In fact, February data from the Centers for Disease Control and
    Prevention (CDC) indicates that white Americans are getting vaccinated at a rate which is 3
    times higher than Black Americans. An even more staggering statistic shows that only 5.4% of
    Black people have received their first dose of the COVID vaccine compared to 60% of white
    people. According to a January poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation, there are still 43% of
    African Americans who are reluctant to get the COVID-19 vaccine; taking a “wait and see”
    approach to find out how well the vaccine works for other people.

    African American communities are still brimming with mistrust following historical and
    contemporary experiences of medical discrimination, including the decades-long Tuskegee
    experiments and the Henrietta Lacks saga. These are just two of many scars that still resonate
    today and are at the forefront of the Black community’s view of the country’s COVID-19 vaccine
    rollout through a skeptical lens. Meanwhile, the pandemic is continuing to ravage our country
    with the U.S. sadly surpassing 520,000 coronavirus-related deaths, according to a recent report.
    To shed a positive light and share accurate information about COVID-19 and the vaccine rollout
    with African Americans, the Black Doctors Against COVID-19 (BCAC) hosted a January Facebook
    Live event, “Making it Plain: What Black America Needs To Know About COVID-19 and
    Vaccines” an episode in an important and informative series which features the nation’s top
    Black medical experts as well as faith-based and social organization leaders who are keeping
    Black Americans informed about what we need to know about COVID-19 and vaccines.
    In the early weeks into the Biden Administration’s start in the White House, they are already
    moving forward on the mission to prioritize building trust with African American communities.
    Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith, one of the event’s guest speakers and director of the White House’s
    Health Equity Task Force, said government and medical institutions have actively earned
    mistrust. But she assured the more than 700,000+ viewers that she is part of an administration
    which is driven to change the narrative for Black communities. “The President-elect has said
    and is committed to honesty and transparency,” she said. “We’ve got an incoming

    administration that reflects the diversity of America. I want to just assure everyone that
    centering on equity is a shared value across the entire administration.”
    For the moment, the worst wave of the current coronavirus infections seems to be behind us.
    According to February data from the New York Times, new COVID cases have declined by a
    whopping 47% since early January. As America starts to mass vaccinate the population in hopes
    of continuing to lower infection rates and death totals, Dr. Nunez-Smith said that’s why the
    Biden Administration is taking the imperative steps to lessen the impact of social determinants
    which affect healthcare, housing and transportation in Black communities. This will help to
    ensure Black communities don’t go backwards.
    “We also have to make sure that vaccinations are free,” Dr. Nunez-Smith said. “That is an
    important consideration,” she said. “But vaccination alone is not sufficient. Specific to COVID-
    19, we have to make sure everyone has equal access to things like testing for COVID.”
    Also at the center of the issue of equity in the dissemination of COVID vaccines to African
    Americans is Dr. Helene Gayle, CEO of the Chicago Community Trust. She’s also co-director of
    the prestigious National Academies of Medicine committee which was commissioned last fall by
    the CDC to submit recommendations for a framework which will help to determine how the
    COVID-19 vaccines can be distributed equitably.
    Dr. Gayle noted the framework recognizes that communities of color have been the hardest hit
    and are disproportionally affected by the pandemic. But race isn’t the only factor that put Black
    people at a higher risk of being infected with the COVID-19 virus. This concern also relates to
    the impact of race and racism. Dr. Gayle said this has made the project a landmark undertaking.
    "It's the first time that equity has been front and center in title and design of a vaccine rollout,”
    she said.
    While we wait for the vaccine to be rolled out widely to the general public, there are concerns
    in the Black community that the process of distributing the COVID-19 vaccines needs to be
    improved. Mark Morial, President and CEO of the National Urban League has echoed this
    uneasiness about the dissemination of the COVID-19 vaccines for African Americans. He says
    the vaccine distribution strategy relies too heavily on hospitals and chain pharmacies, making it
    insufficient to get the job done.
    “The top 25 chain pharmacies groups in the United States have about 38,000 pharmacies,”
    Morial said. “If they were to vaccinate some 300 million people each one of those pharmacies
    would have to give the vaccine to nearly 9,000 people twice,” he said. “That means that each
    pharmacy would administer 18,000 vaccinations of the Prizer vaccine. This is logistically
    impossible.”
    Morial is strongly urging the Biden Administration to make fast and radical changes to the
    COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan across the United States which includes mandating states,
    counties and cities to create their own vaccination plans. He said a broader approach of having

    nurses, doctors, nurse practitioners and physician’s assistants administer the vaccine in
    community-based sites, schools and libraries would be a more effective and “common sense”
    solutions to getting shots of the COVID-19 vaccines into African American’s arms.
    Another dilemma regarding COVID-19 is the misinformation, a lack of information and deep-
    seated mistrust in the Black community regarding the vaccines and the process used to develop
    them. Morial said this has led to the concern, for some African Americans, that the vaccine
    development was rushed or that the process is attached to ghosts of the Tuskegee
    experiments. To confront these concerns, Morial suggests that government, states, counties
    and cities foster broad engagement, public relations and advertising campaigns to provide Black
    communities with accurate information, will help to create transparency relating to COVID-19
    and the vaccines which will help to build confidence in African American communities.
    Morial has also noted that it’s key to have the right messengers amplify medical advice and
    messages about COVID-19 to our communities. “The right messengers are African American
    physicians, doctors and scientists,” he said. “Those medical professionals who we respect in the
    Black community, from the Black medical schools, from the Black professional associations,
    have examined, looked at, reviewed the process and have green lit it.”

    In his leadership role with the National Urban League, Morial has had numerous discussions
    with the Biden Administration’s Task Force, governors, mayors, staff from the National
    Institutes of Health (NIH) and the CDC. Morial has spoken with these groups, saying that he
    envisions Community-Based organizations having a prominent role in the COVID-19 vaccine
    dissemination process.

    Although the battle against COVID-19 is a massive undertaking, Morial said his suggested
    approach will help to sway doubters and boost the Black community’s confidence in the
    distribution of the COVID-19 vaccines, spurring a call to action to get vaccinated. “I fear there
    will be chaos and confusion if this is not done in the right way,” Morial said. “Community-based
    distribution and a community conversation based with the right messengers, and we can
    advance this.”

    As some states continue to struggle with closing the racial gap in the number of COVID-19
    vaccinations for African Americans, Black pastors and other faith-based leaders are taking the
    reins as a group of the respected messengers about the virus in the Black community.
    One of those respected messengers is Reverend Calvin Butts, pastor of the nationally renowned
    Abyssinian Baptist Church in New York. He is also co-chair of the Choose Healthy Life Black
    Clergy Action Plan which addresses COVID-19 and other health disparities in Black communities.
    The founder of the organization is Debra Frazier-Howze who was an advisor to U.S. Presidents
    Bill Clinton and George W. Bush on HIV and AIDS from 1998 to 2003. During that time,
    Reverend Butts was called on to help lead the effort to quash the HIV virus and AIDS, a deathly

    disease, which has ravaged the Black Community. It was a landmark moment in our history
    when the faith-based and science communities joined forces to fight an epidemic.
    Reverend Butts is one of the many faith leaders who is on the frontlines, carrying on the Choose
    Health Life Black Clergy Action Plan’s mission of providing accurate messages and current
    information about COVID-19 while standing with science as well as serving as an ambassador to
    keep his congregation and the Black faith-based community informed about the pandemic.
    “Our community has been the one that’s been the least informed, often left out and of course
    manipulated,” Reverend Butts said. “We believe now based on our success with HIV AIDS that
    our pattern really means bringing together the clergy with the scientists, the doctors and the
    community-based organizations so that we can get the information out,” he added. “We’re
    trying to save lives.”
    In late-January, Reverend Butts rolled up his left sleeve to get his first dose of the Pfizer vaccine,
    along with his wife Patricia at their historic church, which was New York city’s first church to
    administer the vaccine. The church has also recently received 500 doses of the COVID vaccine
    for members of the congregation and the larger community, specifically people who are 65 and
    older and other eligible New Yorkers, including teachers, grocery store workers, and first
    responders. Reverend Butts said this important step is one example of the Black churches’
    commitment to be a vanguard for the health of African American communities.
    While Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith, Dr. Helene Gayle and Mark Morial continue to be prominent
    and strong advocates to vaccinate Black people age 65+ and frontline workers during this stage
    of the fight against COVID-19, Reverend Butts is also continuing to be a champion for the cause.
    He’s spreading the gospel, encouraging his congregation and other faith-based communities to
    rise above reluctancy, trust the COVID-19 vaccines and take the “leap of faith” to get
    vaccinated. This really gives us our best “shot” to stay healthy, combat COVID-19 and the more
    contagious virus variants and win the war that’s being waged against the virus. “The Black
    pastor is still the most trusted of all,” Reverend Butts said. “And I think because we are the
    church, we will have great success, the same way we did when we confronted the AIDS
    pandemic.”

    Darryl Sellers is the Public Relations Director for Creative Marketing Resources, a strategic
    marketing agency in Milwaukee and a partner of the BCAC.
    For more information about COVID-19, health, wellness and upcoming BCAC Facebook Live
    events: Black Coalition Against COVID-19, a key health resource for African Americans
    Black Doctor.org, the world’s largest and most comprehensive online health resource
    specifically targeted to African Americans

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