| Literature DB >> 34709876 |
Eva Y Wong1, Abigail Schachter1, Hannah N Collins1, Lin Song1, Myduc L Ta1, Shuva Dawadi1, Scott Neal1, Fel F Pajimula1, Danny V Colombara1, Kristen Johnson1, Amy A Laurent1.
Abstract
Public Health 3.0 approaches are critical for monitoring disparities in economic, social, and overall health impacts following the COVID-19 pandemic and its associated policy changes to slow community spread. Timely, cross-sector data as identified using this approach help decisionmakers identify changes, track racial disparities, and address unintended consequences during a pandemic. We applied a monitoring and evaluation framework that combined policy changes with timely, relevant cross-sector data and community review. Indicators covered unemployment, basic needs, family violence, education, childcare, access to health care, and mental, physical, and behavioral health. In response to increasing COVID-19 cases, nonpharmaceutical intervention strategies were implemented in March 2020 in King County, Washington. By December 2020, 554 000 unemployment claims were filed. Social service calls increased 100%, behavioral health crisis calls increased 25%, and domestic violence calls increased 25%, with disproportionate impact on communities of color. This framework can be replicated by local jurisdictions to inform and address racial inequities in ongoing COVID-19 mitigation and recovery. Cross-sector collaboration between public health and sectors addressing the social determinants of health are an essential first step to have an impact on long-standing racial inequities. (Am J Public Health. 2021;111(S3):S215-S223. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2021.306422).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34709876 PMCID: PMC8561070 DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2021.306422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Public Health ISSN: 0090-0036 Impact factor: 11.561