Racial justice advocates said they finally felt heard by the quick swell of political will to address disparities like disproportionate COVID-19 deaths or infant and maternal mortality rates.
The declarations âsignified this might be us finally breaking through the noise that they havenât been willing to hear,â said Ryan McClinton, who works at the nonprofit Public Health Advocates in Sacramento County, California. Marsha Guthrie, the senior director at the Government Alliance on Race and Equity, called 2020 a âcatalytic moment for us to kind of reimagine social consciousness.â
âThink about the ⊠decades (and) decades of just fighting to get the conversation about race even centered in the American psyche,â she said. âNow people talk about it as a general course of fact.â
Some placesâ health departments took on the work of the declarations, creating improvement plans centered on racial equity. Others turned the work over to task forces and consultants to look at internal work environments or make action plans and recommendations.
Years after the declarations, community organizers and public health advocates in Milwaukee and Sacramento County say not much has changed. Officials counter that it will take more than a few years to undo centuries of structural and institutional racism.
But experts, officials and advocates all agreed on one thing: The declarations were an important first step toward creating a racially equitable society. Extensive research shows racism can have detrimental health impacts on people of color, including chronic stress and anxiety and higher rates of heart disease and asthma.
âIf weâre not going to name racism in the first place, then weâre not going to start to develop solutions to address it,â said Dara Mendez, who teaches epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh and studied the early declarations. â⊠Then the next step is (asking) what are the actions behind it? ⊠Are there resources? Is there community action?â
MILWAUKEEâS APPROACH
https://www.milwaukeeindependent.com/newswire/milwaukees-approach-officials-advocates-want-address-racism-public-health-crisis/
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