Institutional racism contributes to why African-Americans have been hit harder than the whites in the US amid the COVID-19 pandemic, White House health advisor Anthony Fauci has said."
Obviously the African-American community has suffered from racism for a very, very long period of time," Xinhua news agency reported on Friday citing Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, as saying.
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He made the remarks while testifying before the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
"And I cannot imagine that that has not contributed to the conditions that they find themselves in, economically and otherwise," he said in response to a question by Illinois Democrat Bobby Rush regarding the virus' toll on black people.
Because of economic and other considerations, jobs that the majority of African-Americans undertake do not allow them to protect themselves by working online, posing "a greater risk of infection from work", the specialist explained.
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Compared with white communities, the African-American population is "clearly disproportionately" exposed to the underlying co-morbid conditions, such as hypertension, diabetes, obesity, chronic lung disease and kidney disease, Fauci noted.
"So unfortunately we have a situation where it's sort of a double whammy of a negative capability of them to respond through no fault of their own, because of underlying conditions," he said.
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Fauci's remarks come after federal government data revealed earlier this week that African-Americans were nearly four times more likely than the US' white population to be hospitalized with COVID-19.
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