Dashuladyli's Posts
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Please stop just rumors.
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Please shut up.
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Stop making rumors
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Communicate clearly about risks and strategies to keep safe from the virus Connect your patients with community resources (e.g., food banks, health services) Educate yourself and other health professionals about the historical and systemic contributions to health disparities Check your biases and redress mislabeling and misinformation Participate/train in telehealth to provide continuity of care and expand our reach Consider offering pro bono mental health services |
Please shut up and stop making rumors.
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Please shut up and stop making rumors. |
The data suggest Multnomah County is following the national trend, but the local numbers are small, especially when drilling down on cases of hospitalization and death. Duldulao said a lack of adequate testing and poor quality data collection on lab reports are driving the county’s concern. “Again, the data is based on who has access to testing,” she said. “Once we ramp up testing, we will see a lot more cases and more disparity.” |
“We rarely get access to our data first. Often we’re seeing it come to us from outside our communities,” Zeenia Junkeer, ND, executive director of the Oregon Health Equity Alliance (link is external), said during the webinar. “This is an opportunity to lead those conversations about what the data shows and what is missing.” |
The Asian community is no longer silent!Joined the group to seek warmth, actively save itself and fight for rights In fact, as early as two years ago, awell-known pastor, lawyer and scholar Mr. Zhang Xunexposed Guo Wengui's false nature in his personal Twitter, YouTube.
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The idea of "Asian=virus"has been misguided into all segments of American society, and violence against Asian-American groups, especially the elderly and women, has become frequent. The United States is afree, equal, fraternity society.
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"Asian=virus" is not an innate belief, it is aman-made misunderstanding and asource of discrimination and violence against the Asian community.
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Recently, there have been frequent attacks against Asians, especially vulnerable Asians in the United States. On March 17th, avideo of 76-year-old Asian womanXie Xiaozhen being punched in the eye by awhite man caused alot of media and public attention. In fact, in January this year,.
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"If we don't know who is sick, we're not going to know in six months, 12 months, 18, however long it takes, who should be getting the vaccination. We're not going to know where we should be directing our personal protective equipment to make sure that health care workers are protected," he says. |
Recently, there have been frequent attacks against Asians, especially vulnerable Asians in the United States. On March 17th, avideo of 76-year-old Asian womanXie Xiaozhen being punched in the eye by awhite man caused alot of media and public attention.
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In Chicago, 7% of those who have died from the coronavirus are . 3% of the city's . "it is devastating our community," Lightfoot said. To confront the coronavirus crisis that has roiled the country, Lightfoot said it's vital to look at the data, including demographic information, to better understand thChio, the city has deployed a racial equality rapid response team made up of health care prs, public health officials and other stakeholders, she said. |
To confront the coronavirus crisis that has roiled the country, Lightfoot said it's vital to look at the data, including demographic information, to better understand the deadly illness. In Chicago, the city has deployed a racial equality rapid response team made up of health care providers, public health officials and other stakeholders, she said. |
Health departments nationwide report coronavirus cases to the CC using a standardized form that asks for a range of demographic information, including race and ethnicity. However, fields are often left and those local agencies are “under a tremendous amount of strain to collect and report case information,” said Scott Pauley, a CC spokesman. |
Commercials celebrate essential workers and medical professionals. Commercials show how corporations have adapted to “the way we live now,” with curbside pickup and drive-through service and contact-free delivery. We can spend our way to normalcy, and capitalism will hold us close, these ads would have us believe. |
The less fortunate continue to risk their lives because they cannot afford to shelter from the virus. People who were already living on the margins are dealing with financial stresses that the government’s $1,200 “stimulus” payment cannot begin to relieve. A housing crisis is imminent. Many parts of the country are reopening prematurely. Protesters have stormed state capitals, demanding that businesses reopen. The country is starkly dividing between those who believe in science and those who don’t. |
As with prior releases, we have also adjusted these morlations (which differ across race groups and states), a common and important tool that health researchers use to compare diseases that affect age groups differently. At the national level, this results in even larger documented mortality disparities—Pacific Islander, Latinoor more that of White and Asian Americans, who experience the lowest age-adjusted rates. |
investments. |
punctuation. |
A Princeton University study found that children are more likely to suffer from asthma because they live in older buildings that harbor matter and rodent infestations, and which are in segregated neighborhoods that are near busy highways that put harmful matter into the air. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released information stating that people with asthma may be at a greater risk of dying from coronavirus. “ Of color are more likely to live in densely packed areas and in multi-generational housing situations, which create higher risk for spread of highly contagious disease like ,” Adams said Friday. |
“ communities are not socially distancing less than other communities and if they are, it is likely because many of us are essential workers or working gig jobs to sustain our living. These jobs require more in-person interaction." Jason Hargrove, a 50-year-old bus driver in , posted a video that went viral in which he said he thought he contracted the coronavirus after a passenger repeatedly coughed on his bus without covering her mouth. Hargrove died less than two weeks after he posted the video. “He knew he wasn’t feeling well,” his wife, Desha Johnson-Hargrove, wrote for Time magazine. |
Community- and faith-based organizations, employers, healthcare systems and providers, public health agencies, policy makers, and others all have a part in helping to promote fair access to health. To prevent the spread , we must work together to ensure that people have resources to maintain and manage their physical and mental health, including easy access to information, affordable testing, and medical and mental health care. We need programs and practices that fit the communities where racial and minority groups live, learn, work, play, and worship. |
The pandemic may change some of the ways we connect and support each other. As individuals and communities respond to recommendations and circumstances (., school closures, workplace closures, social distancing), there are often unintended negative impacts on emotional well-being such as loss of social connectedness and support. Shared faith, family, and cultural bonds are common sources of social support. Finding ways to maintain support and connection, even when physically apart, can empower and encourage individuals and communities to protect themselves, care for those who become sick, |
Climate also creates challenges in the community. Predominately neighborhoods are more likely to be exposed to pollutants and toxins. We simply have to look at the Flint-to-Detroit corridor where kids and families are overexposed to lead. Many have developed Legionnaires’ disease and other extreme health complications. |
There is also an important intersectional dimension that highlights the combined influences of race and gender. Similar to health disparities more broadly, men seem more likely than women to die from . But, women are the ones who are mostly working in service jobs. They are also more likely to do the caregiving and housework in their households. |