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US protesters risk COVID-19 'for health of nation'

Issam Ahmed (Agence France-Presse)
Washington, United States
Wed, June 3, 2020

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US protesters risk COVID-19 'for health of nation' Ariel view of protestors gathered near the makeshift memorial in honour of George Floyd marking one week anniversary of his death, on Monday in Minneapolis, Minnesota. - Major US cities -- convulsed by protests, Thousands of people protesting at close quarters, shouting demands and coughing violently when hit by tear gas: experts fear demonstrations roiling the US could reignite the spread of the coronavirus.clashes with police and looting since the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd a week ago -- braced Monday for another night of unrest. More than 40 cities have imposed curfews after consecutive nights of tension that included looting and the trashing of parked cars. AFP/Chandan Khanna (AFP/Chandan Khanna )

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housands of people protesting at close quarters, shouting demands and coughing violently when hit by tear gas: experts fear demonstrations roiling the US could reignite the spread of the coronavirus.

But, stress clinicians and researchers, racialized police violence itself remains a grave and neglected public health crisis for African Americans, threatening not just their lives but raising the risk of stress-related diseases from heart failure to cancer.

It has been just over a week since George Floyd, an African American man, died after a white police officer knelt on his neck for several minutes, sparking a wave of protests across the country against institutional racism.

For Ebony Hilton, a physician at the University of Virginia hospital who is herself black, the issue highlights what she calls the threat of the two pandemics: COVID-19, and police brutality.

"We are expecting to see a spike (in coronavirus cases) because there's no social distancing and unfortunately most people wear their masks incorrectly," she told AFP.

Law enforcement agencies have routinely fired tear-inducing pepper spray and tear gas, a nerve agent that causes intense burning, in order to disperse crowds.

On Monday, for example, federal police hit peaceful activists in Lafayette Park outside the White House with rubber bullets and tear gas in order to let President Donald Trump get a photo-op at a historic church that had suffered damage the night before.

"The pepper spraying and resulting coughing/gagging also heightens risk," said Hilton.

"Additionally, COVID can be spread via droplets on eyes and many aren't wearing goggles." 

 

Police a 'public health threat'

Even so, said Hilton, it was important to contextualize why people were willing to take these risks. A study carried out in 2019 found that black men are 2.5 times more likely to be killed by the police than their white counterparts.

"We think that there's ample evidence that police are a threat to public health in the United States," Rutgers University's Frank Edwards, the lead author of the paper, told AFP at the time.

Relying on media reports as well as official data, Edwards and colleagues estimated one fatality from police use of force for every 1,000 black male births. Police violence is a leading cause of death for black men aged 20-29, just behind cancer.

Cav Manning, a 52-year-old emcee from New York, is just one of tens of thousands nationwide willing to risk coronavirus as he joined a protest in Brooklyn on Monday evening.  

"What we saw is so disturbing that we've got to be out here right now, despite COVID, despite the fact that you might get infected," he told AFP.

The problem isn't just the high profile deaths that make the news, but the psychological stress inflicted on African Americans continually targeted by police. 

"What we know is that chronic stress is directly linked to increased risk of cancer formation, directly linked to hypertension, to diabetes, to heart failure, to obesity," said Hilton.

 

Precautions stressed 

The demonstrations come as the number of new coronavirus deaths in the US, the world's hardest hit country, continues to decrease after peaking in mid-April, and as states partly reopen their economies.

 

 

Research has linked warmer summer months to a decreased COVID-19 spread in temperate parts of the world.

Brandon Brown, an epidemiologist at the University of California Riverside said that while the expected risk of COVID-19 transmission is lowered outdoors, it is not reduced to zero, especially when people are unable to physically distance when faced with charging police.

"It is important to wear a mask not only to protect yourself against COVID-19, but also from state surveillance," he emphasized.

Robert Glatter, an emergency physician in New York added that the aerosol produced by tear gas itself could potentially act as a carrier that projects viral droplets far deeper into a crowd than they would otherwise have traveled.

All of these factors have combined to make public health professionals very nervous about the impact two or so weeks down the line.

This is particularly since the protests feature large numbers of blacks and other minorities who are at higher levels of risk from COVID-19 because of underlying health conditions that worsen the disease's progression.

Manning, the emcee, said he and others were aware of the danger. 

"But this is also something that is happening for the health of the nation."

 

 

 

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