This spring, New Jersey emergency room nurse Maritza Beniquez saw “wave after wave” of sick patients, each wearing a look of fear that grew increasingly familiar as the weeks wore on.
Soon, it was her colleagues at Newark’s University Hospital – the nurses, techs and doctors with whom she had been working side-by-side–who turned up in the ER, themselves struggling to breath. “So many of our own coworkers got sick, especially toward the beginning, it literally decimated our staff,” she said.
By the end of June, 11 of Beniquez’s colleagues were dead. Like the patients they had been treating, most were Black and Latino.
“We were disproportionately affected because of the way that Blacks and Latinos in this country have been disproportionately affected across every [part of] our lives–from schools to jobs to homes,” she said.
Now Beniquez feels like a vanguard of another kind. On 14 December, she became the first person in New Jersey to receive the coronavirus vaccine – and was one of many medical workers of color featured prominently next to headlines heralding the vaccine’s arrival at US hospitals.
It was a joyous occasion, one that kindled the possibility of seeing her parents and her 96-year-old grandmother, who live in Puerto Rico, again. But those nationally broadcast images were also a reminder of those for whom the vaccine came too late.
Covid-19 has taken an outsized toll on Black and Hispanic Americans. And those disparities extend to the medical workers who have intubated them, cleaned their bedsheets, and held their hands in their final days, a Guardian/Kaiser Health News investigation has found. People of color account for about 65% of fatalities in cases in which there is race and ethnicity data.
One recent study found healthcare workers of color were more than twice as likely as their white counterparts to test positive for the virus. They were more likely to treat patients with Covid-19, more likely to work in nursing homes – major coronavirus hotbeds – and more likely to cite an inadequate supply of personal protective equipment (PPE), according to the report.
In a national sample of 100 cases gathered by the Guardian/Kaiser Health News in which a healthcare worker expressed concerns over insufficient PPE before they died of Covid-19, three-quarters of the victims were identified as Black, Hispanic, Native, or Asian.
“Black healthcare workers are more likely to want to go into public-sector care where they know that they will disproportionately treat communities of color,” said Adia Wingfield, a Washington University sociologist who has studied racial inequality in the healthcare industry. “But they also are more likely to be attuned to the particular needs and challenges that communities of color may have,” she said.
Not only do many Black healthcare staff work in lower-resourced health centers, she said, they are also more likely to suffer from many of the same comorbidities found in the general Black population, a legacy of systemic inequities.
And they may fall victim to lower standards of care. Dr Susan Moore, a 52-year-old Black pediatrician in Indiana, was hospitalized with Covid-19 in November and, according to a video posted to her Facebook account, had to ask repeatedly for tests, Remdesevir and pain medication. She said her white doctor dismissed her complaints of pain and she was discharged, only to be admitted to another hospital 12 hours later.
Numerous studies have found Black Americans often receive worse medical care than their white counterparts: in March, a Boston biotech firm published an analysis showing physicians were less likely to refer Black patients for coronavirus tests when they showed symptoms of the illness. Doctors are also less likely to prescribe painkillers to Black patients.
“If I was white, I wouldn’t have to go through that,” Moore said in the video posted from her hospital bed. “This is how Black people get killed, when you send them home, and they don’t know how to fight for themselves.” She died on 20 December of complications from Covid-19, her son Henry Muhammad told news outlets.
Along with people of color, immigrant health workers have suffered disproportionate losses to Covid-19. More than one-third of healthcare workers to die of Covid-19 in the US were born abroad, from the Philippines to Haiti, Nigeria and Mexico, according to a Guardian/Kaiser Health News analysis of cases for which there is data. They account for 20% of healthcare workers in the US overall.
Dr Ramon Tallaj, a physician and chairman of Somos, a nonprofit network of healthcare providers in New York, said immigrant doctors and nurses often see patients from their own communities–and many working-class, immigrant communities have been devastated by Covid-19.
“Our community is essential workers. They had to go to work at the beginning of the pandemic, and when they got sick, they would come and see the doctor in the community,” he said. Twelve doctors and nurses in the Somos network have died of Covid-19, he said.
Dr Eriberto Lozada was an 83-year-old family physician in Long Island. He was still seeing patients out of his practice in New York when cases began to climb in the spring. Originally from the Philippines, a country with a long history of sending skilled medical workers to the United States, he was proud to be a doctor and “proud to have been an immigrant who made good”, his son James Lozada said.
Lozada’s family remember him as strict and strong-willed – they affectionately called him “the king”. He instilled in his children the importance of a good education. He died in April.
Two of his four sons, John and James Lozada, are doctors. Both were vaccinated this month. Considering all they had been through, John said, it was a “bittersweet” occasion. But he thought it was important for another reason – to set an example to his patients.
The inequities in Covid infections and deaths risk fueling distrust in the vaccine. In a recent Pew study, around 42% of Black respondents said they would “definitely or probably” get the vaccine compared to 60% of the general population.
This makes sense to Patricia Gardner, a Black, Jamaica-born nursing manager at Hackensack University medical center in New Jersey whose family, colleagues, and she herself, have all been infected. “A lot of what I hear is, ‘How is it that we weren’t the first to get the care, but now we’re the first to get vaccinated?’” she said.
Like Beniquez, she was vaccinated on 14 December. “For me to step up to say, ‘I want to be in the first group’ – I’m hoping that sends a message,” she said.
Beniquez, the nurse in Newark, said she felt the weight of that responsibility when she signed on to the first person to receive the vaccine in her state. Many of her patients have expressed skepticism over the vaccine, fueled, she said, by a health system that has failed them for years.
“We remember the Tuskegee trials. We remember the ‘appendectomies’”– reports that women were forcibly sterilized in a Georgia Ice detention center. “These are things that have happened to this community to the Black and Latino communities over the last century. As a healthcare worker, I have to recognize that their fears are legitimate and explain ‘This is not that,’” she said.
Beniquez said her joy and relief over receiving the vaccine are tempered by the reality of rising cases in the ER. The adrenaline she and her colleagues felt in the spring is gone, replaced by fatigue and wariness of the months ahead.
Her hospital has placed 11 trees in the lobby, one for each employee who has died of Covid-19; they have been adorned with remembrances and gifts from their colleagues.
There’s one for Kim King-Smith, 53, the friendly EKG technician, who visited friends of friends or family whenever they ended up in the hospital.
One for Danilo Bolima, 54, the nurse from the Philippines who became a professor and was the head of patient care services.
One for Obinna Chibueze Eke, 42, the Nigerian nursing assistant, who asked friends and family to pray for him when he was hospitalized with Covid-19.
“Each day, we remember our fallen colleagues and friends as the heroes who helped keep us going throughout this pandemic and beyond,” hospital president and CEO Dr Shereef Elnahal said in a statement. “We can never forget their contributions and their collective passion for this community, and each other.”
Just outside the building, stands a twelfth tree. “It’s going to be for whoever else we lose in this battle,” Beniquez said.
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