The AHA, American Medical Association, and American Nurses Association today urged Senate leaders to include in the next COVID-19 relief bill provisions to strengthen the federal response for racial and ethnic minority and marginalized communities, which are disproportionately affected by the pandemic.

鈥淥ur members are on the front lines of the pandemic, and as we continue to battle COVID-19, we need the federal government to help identify and address the needs of these communities 鈥 their health impacts the health of all of us,鈥 the organizations . 鈥淭he health care interventions we provide must be supported by an immediate, comprehensive and data-driven federal response to save the lives of people of color. We continue to urge a robust, targeted approach that will increase the availability of testing, ensure access to equitable treatment, disseminate timely, relevant, culturally appropriate and culturally responsive public health information, and address the social determinants and root causes of health, including structural racism."

Related News Articles

Headline
Duke University鈥檚 Anna Tharakan, lead project manager on Closing the Gap on Hypertension Disparities, and Bradi Granger, Ph.D., research professor at Duke鈥
Headline
Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. May 27 announced in a post on X that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention鈥
Headline
Leaders of the Food and Drug Administration May 20 announced new guidelines for administering the COVID-19 vaccine in a paper published by the New England鈥
Headline
A study published April 8 by the Public Library of Science鈥檚 Journal of Global Public Health found that driving while infected with COVID-19 raises the risk of鈥
Headline
A National Institutes of Health study published April 2 found that blood pressure patterns observed during the first half of pregnancy can determine a woman's鈥
Headline
A study published March 31 by the National Institutes of Health found that adults living in rural areas have worse cardiovascular health than those in urban鈥