Three policy lessons to advance health equity during an ever-evolving pandemic

Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Orr, Jacquelynn
Publisher
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Date
June 2022
Abstract / Description

Since Omicron first appeared here in December 2021, the United States has had a 63 percent higher COVID death rate than other high-income nations. We also continue to experience deep disparities by race and ethnicity for risk of infection, hospitalization, and death from COVID. Even though federal agencies issued guidelines on how to stay safe, it was our local and state responses that explain many of the differences in health outcomes. We turned to researchers working with Systems for Action, Policies for Action, and Evidence for Action, all signature research programs of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, to find evidence-based answers within policies, practices, and data to help explain these disparities. The questions included: Which responses worked best during the pandemic for our population as a whole and for communities at greatest risk? And how can we respond to future large-scale national emergencies in ways that better protect the health of vulnerable people and communities? (author abstract) 

Artifact Type
Application
Reference Type
Blog
P4HE Authored
Yes
Topic Area
Illness/Disease/Injury/Wellbeing » Communicable Disease » COVID-19/Coronavirus
Policy and Practice » Services & Programs