Public health team published on effects of COVID, systemic racism on populations of color

A St. Kate's team of faculty, ´ºÓêÖ±²¥s, and alumni were published as co-authors in a study supported by APDC and GHR funds.

The article reports that the pandemics of COVID-19 and systemic racism have a deleterious impact on the daily life experiences and health for populations of color. The experiences are compounded for immigrant/refugee communities that may have other barriers such as English language literacy or trauma. Cumulative stress due to everyday racism is harmful for health.

This study describes the impact of day-to-day lived experiences of Karen, Somali, and Latinx communities during the COVID-19 pandemic and aftermath of the police murder of George Floyd in the Minneapolis/St. Paul metro area. In-depth interviews were conducted over three weeks in September and October 2020 to understand the daily life experiences of Karen, Somali, and Latinx adults drawn from community contacts during the COVID-19 pandemic and the aftermath of the police murder of George Floyd. The study found that immigrant/refugee communities of color in Minneapolis/St. Paul face daily experiences of racism that were compounded by the events of 2020. Discrimination and systemic racism contribute to the persistent health inequities among populations of color.