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Public health expert: COVID-19 pandemic highlighting health care disparities in U.S. system

The COVID-19 pandemic opened a Pandora’s box of inequalities in the U.S., highlighting the widespread disparities in health care and social injustice. Black and Hispanic communities have experienced a disproportionately large number of COVID-19 related deaths; this is especially true among nursing home residents.

Health policy researcher Amit Kumar, who recently co-authored an article that looks at COVID-19 mortality by race and ethnicity, is available to discuss the factors that contribute to these disparities. Kumar is an assistant professor at Northern Arizona University’s Phoenix Biomedical Campus who studies disparities in health care and risk adjustment when comorbidities, socioeconomic status and a patient’s functional status are taken into account.

The study, published in JAMDA, analyzes nursing home mortality rates from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services compared to county level data on mortality and deaths published in The New York Times; the researchers found nursing homes with a high proportion of Black and Hispanic residents had significantly higher COVID-19 mortality rates per 1,000 residents compared to homes with majority white residents.

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Recommendations to improve equity in quality of care in nursing homes: