At first, COVID-19 did not seem to discriminate. The patients who walked into Dr. Uché Blackstock’s urgent-care clinics in Brooklyn, N.Y., with coughs and fevers were white, black and brown.

But in the last few weeks, she has witnessed a notable shift: Fewer white people have showed up, while there has been a dramatic uptick in the number of black and brown patients.

Many are lower-income service workers and essential workers — delivery drivers, police officers, subway workers, corrections officers — who do not have the luxury of working from home or retreating to a second home in a less dense community.

“People say that COVID-19 is a great equalizer and that everyone’s going to be impacted,” said Blackstock, chief executive of Advancing Health Equity. “But the fact is that certain communities are more harshly impacted than others.”


The available data of the race of coronavirus victims — released by only a handful of states — bear out that observation, revealing a stark disparity between white and black residents.

In Michigan , black people have died at more than eight times the rate of white people. In Illinois, they have died at nearly six times the rate. In Louisiana, the difference is fivefold.


Public health experts said those figures reflected deep-rooted social and economic inequalities.

Not only are black Americans less likely to be insured and able to afford testing, but they are more likely to have underlying medical conditions such as asthma, diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease that could put them at higher risk for severe illness.

They are 60% more likely than white Americans to be diagnosed with diabetes and 40% more likely to have high blood pressure, according to the U.S. government.

“This virus is treading a glide path that unfortunately our society has paved through structural racism and poverty,” said Dr. Abdul El-Sayed, a former director of the Detroit Health Department. “It is finding its way into our most vulnerable communities, who in our country tend to be disproportionately black and brown.”


The problem is compounded by the fact that many of the most vulnerable people work in service jobs that increase their risk of being exposed to the virus. Fewer than 20% of black workers are able to work from home compared with about one-third of their white counterparts, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Last week, Jason Hargrove, a 50-year-old bus driver from Detroit, died from complications of COVID-19 just 11 days after he posted a video railing against a woman on his bus who had just coughed four or five times without covering her mouth.

“We’re out here as public workers, doing our job, trying to make an honest living to take care of our families,” he said on the video. “But for you to get on the bus, and stand on the bus, and cough several times without covering up your mouth, and you know that we’re in the middle of a pandemic, that lets me know that some folks don’t care.”

On Monday, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and hundreds of doctors called on the federal government to begin reporting the racial and ethnic demographic data on COVID-19 immediately.


“Systemic racism and bias in the healthcare system have resulted in chronically poor health outcomes for black Americans,” Kristen Clarke, the president of the committee, wrote in a letter to the Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “These co-morbidities render black Americans more susceptible to severe respiratory complications and death resulting from COVID-19.”

The nation’s top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said at a White House briefing Tuesday that health disparities had always existed for the African American community, but the pandemic was “shining a bright light on how unacceptable that is.”

“It’s not that they’re getting infected more often,” he said. “It’s that when they do get infected, their underlying medical conditions ... wind them up in the ICU and ultimately give them a higher death rate.”


Seema Verma, the administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, said the administration would soon release more demographic data.

Such racial data are needed to improve access to testing and treatment, according to public health experts.

“We need to know which communities are going to need more resources so that we can allocate them equitably and mitigate the potential devastation,” Blackstock said. “What communities are going to need more healthcare workers? Who’s going to need more personal protective equipment? Who’s going to need more ventilators ? Who’s going to need more trained personnel who can work in an ICU setting?”


In New York, the discrepancy between rich white and poor black neighborhoods is so stark that Blackstock has closed a clinic in the relatively white, affluent area of Brooklyn Heights so that she can shift staff to clinics dealing with the surge of infected black and brown patients in Prospect Park South and Crown Heights.

“Already before the COVID-19 pandemic, these communities were in crisis,” she said. “And now we have a crisis within a crisis.”

In Chicago, where black people constitute 30% of the city’s population but 68% of COVID-19 deaths, Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced Monday that officials would mount an aggressive public health campaign targeting minority communities.

“We can’t simply stand by and let this disease wreak havoc in our communities,” she said. “Lives are truly at stake.”


In Louisiana, Dr. Joseph Kanter, assistant state health officer and medical director for the New Orleans region, said the disproportionate number of African Americans who had been infected and died with COVID-19 was “concerning and disheartening,” but “not entirely surprising given the degree of health disparities and inequity we know exist in Louisiana.”

Dr. Joshua Denson, an intensivist at Tulane Medical Center in New Orleans, said he had seen many African American patients with COVID-19 in recent weeks, many with preexisting conditions that made them vulnerable, like obesity and diabetes.

“Our first cases were occupations that had a lot of exposure,” he said. “Whether Uber driver or bus drivers, service workers, teachers.”

“We have to look into the data and see what could potentially explain this,” he added. “New Orleans is a city that’s known to have a lot of health disparities.”


Some black residents say that the problems are further exacerbated by members of the community who resist calls to social distance and refuse to wear masks.

In Baton Rouge’s Uptown neighborhood, James Harris, a 63-year-old mechanic, has been quaranting at home — wearing a mask when he goes out to Walmart and not giving friends rides in his car.

But even after a neighbor died on March 24, he said, many of his neighbors were not taking precautions.


“They’re not worried about the virus,” he said.

In the mid-city subdivision of Timberwoods, Tabby Granville said she did everything she could to keep her 79-year-old father, Felix Phillips, out of the hospital after he started feeling sick.

But on Tuesday, the family decided it had no choice but to take him to the hospital, where he tested positive for COVID-19. By that night, doctors were deciding whether to put him on a ventilator.

Phillips didn’t have any underlying conditions and still worked as a janitor at a nursing home, where his daughter suspects he caught the virus.


Granville, 44, worried whether she or her husband, Kenneth Frazier, who both have a history of diabetes, had been exposed to the virus.

On Tuesday evening, Frazier was called back to his job as a scaffolder at a chemical plant.

He decided to tell his boss he was not ready to come back in.

Jarvie reported from Atlanta and Hennessy-Fiske from New Orleans.