Anthony FauciAnthony Fauci Night Health Care: Biden Visits Pfizer Vaccine Manufacturing Plant in Michigan | Snow delays 6 million doses | An Israeli study provides new evidence in a one-dose debate. Blumenthal is pushing Facebook and Twitter to eliminate the misinformation of the vaccine aimed at pregnant women., the country’s top infectious disease expert, said on Friday that racial disparities in vaccination against COVID-19 are “very disturbing”.
Fauci made the statement during an interview on MSNBC’s “The Reid Out,” he and host Joy Reid were discussing data showing that white populations were being vaccinated at higher rates than communities of color.
“They get a double blow against them, not only do they have a propensity to get infected because of their work in the community, but they have the underlying conditions that make them more likely to get a serious outcome,” Fauci said. poorly served populations. “Now [that] we have vaccines available, the proportions you showed are very disturbing. ”
While Fauci acknowledged a sense of “understandable vaccination hesitation” among minority communities, he noted that it is important to actively expand access to minority populations.
“We need to really extend ourselves to the community to have access to minority populations that don’t have it,” Fauci said, noting that President BidenJoe BidenREAD: House Democrats ’big COVID-19 relief bill introduces the .9T relief package. Launches Nunes lawsuit against CNN MORE has actively set up vaccination centers in areas heavily populated by minority communities.
Fauci also said he has been working to directly address vaccine vaccination in communities of color.
“What we have tried to do, and I take it very seriously, is to reach out to the African American and Latino population and explain to them that we fully respect why you are doubting,” Fauci said. “But this story is conveyed and you have to say, ‘Look, I respect your concern, but these are the two or three reasons why you really need to get vaccinated. For your own health, for the health of your community and , literally, for the health of the entire nation. ”
Black or African American populations are nearly three times more likely to be hospitalized for COVID-19 compared to white populations and almost twice as likely to die from the disease, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Hispanic communities are 3.2 times more likely to be hospitalized for COVID-19 and 2.3 times more likely to die.