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Stars Sign Letter to Biden for People's Vaccine

Stars Sign Letter to Biden for People's Vaccine
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People Over 75 Are First in Line to Be Vaccinated Against COVID-19. The Average Black Person Here Doesn't Live That Long.


People Over 75 Are First in Line to Be Vaccinated Against COVID-19. The Average Black Person Here Doesn’t Live That Long.
Prioritizing COVID-19 vaccinations for people 75 and up can leave out Black Americans, who tend to die younger than their white counterparts. In majority-Black Shelby County, TN, this gap raises questions of how to make the vaccine rollout equitable.
(Source: Emily Wakeman)
By Wendi C. Thomas and Hannah Grabenstein, MLK50: Justice Through Journalism, ProPublica | February 22, 2021 at 6:22 PM CST - Updated February 22 at 6:26 PM
“This story was originally published by ProPublica.”
People Over 75 Are First in Line to Be Vaccinated Against COVID-19. The Average Black Person Here Doesn’t Live That Long. ....

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People Over 75 Are First in Line to Be Vaccinated Against COVID-19. The Average Black Person Doesn't Live That Long. — ProPublica


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But it may be March before the couple, who are both Black and 65, are eligible to get the vaccine, based on the state’s age-based vaccination plan. Tennessee, like most states, gave first priority to those 75 and over, following the advice of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As the virus’s death toll climbs to more than 465,000 nationwide, policymakers around the country are struggling to inject equity into vaccination policies. ....

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COVID-19 news from i Annals of Internal Medicine /i


Racial minorities more likely to become infected with COVID-19
An analysis of Kaiser Permanente members in Northern California early in the COVID-19 pandemic found that racial minorities were more likely than white patients to test positive for COVID-19. The findings are published in
Annals of Internal Medicine.
Researchers from Kaiser Permanente, The Permanente Medical Group, and Stanford Cancer Institute studied health records for 3.5 million patients in the Kaiser Health system, more than 91,000 of whom received a COVID-19 test between Feb. 1 and May 31, 2020. That data showed that Latino patients were nearly 4 times as likely as white patients to become infected with the virus, while Asian and Black patients were 2 times as likely to test positive for COVID-19 compared to white patients. The odds of hospitalization were also higher for Latino, Asian, and Black patients with COVID-19 than for white patients. However, the study did not find racial disparities in mo ....

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