Reexamining lessons learned from COVID-19
CU Boulder professor is concerned that the focus on individual responsibility for health and wellnessāespecially during health crises like the COVID pandemicāoverlooks underlying causes as to why minorities generally had worse outcomes than the overall population in the U.S. Ideas to be discussed in next Letās CU Well seminar
In the days since COVID-19 first became a pandemic in the United States in 2020, researchers and health care professionals developed a series of guidelines associated with getting vaccinated, masking, handwashing and social distancing, as well as making lifestyle changes, to reduce the risk of dying or becoming seriously ill from the disease.
Those guidelines were well-meaning, but at the same time they generally are focused on ābiomedical individualismā (how the virus is transmitted and what the individual could do to reduce their risk) to the exclusion of understanding why certain segments of the population, particularly racial and ethnic minorities, were at much greater risk of being harmed by COVID-19, according to Maisam Alomar, University of Colorado Boulder professor in women and gender studies. Part of her research focuses on race and gender policies of medicine and rehabilitation.
āItās not that masks or vaccines arenāt important,ā says Alomar, acknowledging that the politics around COVID-19 can be polarizing. However, at the same time, āpart of what Iām suggesting is that we need to be moving away from our almost exclusive focus on biomedical individualism in our understanding of wellness ā¦ to try to understand that group wellness is not just the sum of individual behaviors or the biological mechanisms by which the virus can infect someone.ā
For example, the scientific and health care communities came to embrace the idea that making healthful lifestyle choices could reduce the risk of becoming sick from COVIDāwithout recognizing that these lifestyle choices are not equally available to everyone, that some people live in āfood desertsā that make it difficult to obtain nutritious meals or that those populations donāt have easy access to recreational spaces, according to Alomar.
āThese are some of the things we donāt tend to consider as much,ā she says, adding, āIām also suggesting that we should be tailoring our interventions to account for the most vulnerable people ā¦ and this idea that when you structure your health care systems in a way thatās geared toward the most vulnerable people that you yield better health results for everyone.ā
Whatās more, when considering why certain groups of people, such as racial or ethnic minorities, have worse outcomes when it comes to COVID, there is a tendency even among the scientific community to ascribe those outcomes to preexisting conditions within those communities or even biological factorsārather than issues having to do with socioeconomic inequities more generally and the disparity in health care among different segments of the U.S. population, according to Alomar.
Alomar will share other additional views on COVID-19 and U.S. health care policyĢżduring her upcoming seminar, āMoving Away from Biomedical Individualism in Health and Wellness.āĢżThis event is scheduled as a Zoom presentation starting at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, March 21. The event is free, butĢżregistration is required.
The event is part of theĢżLetās CU WellĢżspeaker series for CU staff, students and interested community members. The series is an offshoot ofĢżBe Well, a wellness initiative launched by the College of Arts and Sciences.
Alomar draws a line between COVID-19ās effects on varying populations relate and the āinterdisciplinesā at universities.
According to Alomar, interdisciplinesāwhich includes Black and feminist studiesāhave performed valuable research related to COVID-19. Thatās particularly true, she says, when it comes to debunking some unsupported claims involving COVID-19 outcomes based on race and ethnicity.Ģż
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Interdisciplines offer a very useful critiqueĢż... When budgets are tight, people start asking, do we really need this (field of study) if thereās a crisis? I think that when thereās a crisis we need these fields even more because of the explanatory power they offer.ā
For example, she notes that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has highlighted obesity as a co-morbidity factor disproportionally harming minorities in COVID outcomes, but that research from a noted sociologist found that āthe association between āobesityā and mortality is baseless.ā
Alomar says interdisciplines at universities can be very useful for the insights and critiques they provide for various fields of study, such as science and health care. At the same time, she says interdisciplines also tend to be one of the programs universities first look to cut when their finances are dented by unforeseen circumstances, such as the Great Recession of 2008 or the COVID-19 pandemic.
āWhat Iām saying is interdisciplines offer a very useful critique, and itās very important to have that in a university,ā Alomar says. āWhen budgets are tight, people start asking, do we really need this (field of study) if thereās a crisis? I think that when thereās a crisis we need these fields even more because of the explanatory power they offer.ā
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