Working to Level the Playing Field: COVID-19 and Health Care Inequities
Fall 2020 Dominican Magazine
Faculty and alumni are addressing social inequities in a time of crisis 海角社区 is one of only 26 higher education institutions across the country to be selected by the Association of American Colleges and Universities to participate in the Truth, Racial Healing & Transformation (TRHT) project, a comprehensive, community-based process committed to addressing historic and contemporary effects of systemic racism, and to advancing transformational and sustainable change.
Working to Level the Playing Field: COVID-19 and Health Care Inequities
Tamara Bland, acting executive director of the MacNeil School of Nursing and a Faculty Fellow in the ENACT (Education Network for Active Civic Transformation) program, was joined by Neil Ehmig 鈥16, BSN, a trauma nurse at Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, and Nancy Rivera 鈥13, who earned her degree in nutrition and dietetics and is program manager of WIC鈥檚 (Women, Infants and Children) supplemental food program on Chicago鈥檚 south side.
Bland, a former home health care nurse on Chicago鈥檚 west side who has done extensive research on health care disparities, provided some insight as to why communities of color are disproportionately impacted by COVID-19, explaining that 鈥渞ace is not the determinant of health care inequities鈥攔acism is the cause.鈥 Adding COVID-19 to Black and Brown communities, already vulnerable due to high rates of heart disease, stroke and diabetes, as well as the negative effects of gun violence and police brutality, has caused mortality rates to skyrocket. 鈥淲e have to get to the root of racism in order to have a positive effect in our Black and Brown communities. We have to improve the health of the community itself. When you look at zip codes from downtown to the west side, it shaves 10 to 15 years off a person鈥檚 life. That is heartbreaking. Now is the time to work harder to level the playing field.鈥
Rivera noted that the south Chicago area where she works is considered a food desert and residents don鈥檛 have access to fresh fruits and vegetables. She works with a high-risk population already and this summer鈥檚 looting left people with even fewer resources. 鈥淚 had moms who were devastated and couldn鈥檛 make it on regular distribution dates.鈥 The WIC program responded by providing extra resources, including back-to-school materials. 鈥淎 huge part of helping the community heal is letting people know that you鈥檙e listening to them.鈥
Ehmig discussed his experiences on the frontlines of the pandemic. 鈥淢oving into April, we didn鈥檛 really know what we were getting into.鈥 Recounting how the hospital rapidly progressed from asking a few nurses to volunteer with COVID cases, to converting his entire department to a COVID unit, he said, 鈥淚t was about as bad as you think it is. It went from zero to 100 in a very short amount of time.鈥 Ehmig credits Dominican for instilling in him the mission of giving compassionate service. 鈥淚 went into nursing because I wanted to help people get better. That鈥檚 what helps me head into work every day.鈥