key: cord-0984498-nxd0uqop authors: Wright, Lakiea S.; Louisias, Margee; Phipatanakul, Wanda title: The United States’ reckoning with racism during the COVID-19 pandemic: What can we learn and do as allergist-immunologists? date: 2020-11-05 journal: J Allergy Clin Immunol DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2020.10.034 sha: cdb148d63d903dd5bdcee03ae3f86b451c6cc783 doc_id: 984498 cord_uid: nxd0uqop nan The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic magnified and mirrored the racial disparities we see across numerous health conditions, including asthma. In the United States, we had to confront 2 crises concurrently, the pandemic and systemic racial injustice due to the recent murders of unarmed Black Americans. 1 These intersecting issues had a synergistic effect that propelled racism into the forefront of our national conversation. As allergists and immunologists, we must confront racism within our specialty and address how it negatively impacts our patients. In this article, we will discuss how biopsychosocial mechanisms of racism contribute to health disparities (using asthma as an example) and offer solutions for dismantling racism to eliminate inequities. Racism, both structural and interpersonal, is a fundamental cause of health disparities in the United States. 2 Structural racism, described as the integration of historically rooted and culturally enforced discriminatory practices and policies into societal systems, is the main driver of health disparities in the United States. Residential segregation is a prime example of structural racism. Segregation is a byproduct of historic redlining, which consists of discriminatory federal and private housing policies created in 1934. 2 These policies shaped American neighborhoods, leading to disinvestment in communities of color, and resulting in present-day concentrated poverty, poorly funded schools, increased exposure to industrial pollution and hazardous waste, and food and medical deserts. These neighborhood characteristics have been shown to contribute to poor health outcomes. 2 Structural racism has shaped the social determinants of health, which underscore many health disparities. 2 Studies have shown how social, biological, and environmental factors may contribute to health inequities observed in asthma management and control. There is a paucity of studies that have directly examined associations of racism and asthma. In a study of several California cities, historically redlined census tracts were associated with higher percentages of Blacks and Latinos in poverty, higher mean levels of pollution, and increased rates of emergency department visits, compared with other census tracts. 3 As it relates to interpersonal racism, in one study, perceived racism was associated with adult onset of asthma among Black women, 4 and in a pediatric study, perceived discrimination was associated with greater odds of asthma and poor control in Blacks. 5 Racism is associated with biological effects such as stress, which may have harmful effects on homeostasis and disrupt the functioning of interrelated immune, neuroendocrine, and autonomic systems. 6 In addition, stress has been implicated in the development of atopic disease including asthma through neuroimmune programming in utero. 7 During these unprecedented times, we must acknowledge the biopsychosocial mechanisms and detrimental health consequences of racism. In Fig 1, we provide a conceptual framework for a multilevel approach to dismantling racism, providing suggestions for individual and collective actions with an emphasis on policy reform to effect change on a national level. We cannot be complicit. We must act urgently and swiftly to dismantle racism, to move beyond questioning whether it exists, and to transition from the denial to transformative zone (Fig 1) . We must proactively implement solutions to reform systems and structures that perpetuate the existence of racism in society and medicine including our specialty. We recognize that this is a process and many individuals may enter at different stages/zones. Although Fig 1 provides a general framework, below we offer specific suggestions, as it relates to our specialty, which fit into the active learning and transformative zones. 10 A. Advocating for Science Technology Engineering Mathematics education in schools in minority communities. B. Creating pipeline programs with elementary/high schools, historically Black colleges and universities, and minority undergraduate and graduate student groups to engage interest in allergy-immunology and support entry into our fellowship programs. C. Critically analyzing the racial diversity in the workplace including of our specialty's governance, leadership, and membership and implementing policies and practices to promote equity. A. Many of the suggestions mentioned, for example, access to specialty care, housing, education, and food insecurity, afford us opportunities to work with other medical societies to amplify our advocacy efforts and effect change on a larger scale while promoting an antiracism, diversity, and inclusion agenda. B. Mandate that Health and Human Services create an interdisciplinary team to address health, educational, environmental, and economic consequences of structural racism and implement comprehensive policy reform. Although dismantling racism may seem like an insurmountable task, we must all take individual responsibility and work collectively to effect multilevel change with an emphasis on policy reform to have a broader impact. We can use this opportunity to be radical and reimagine our specialty to achieve equity and justice for all. COVID-19 pandemic, unemployment, and civil unrest: underlying deep racial and socioeconomic divides Structural racism and health inequities in the USA: evidence and interventions Associations between historical residential redlining and current age-adjusted rates of emergency department visits due to asthma across eight cities in California: an ecological study Experiences of racism and the incidence of adult-onset asthma in the Black Women's Health Study Perceived discrimination associated with asthma and outcomes in minority youth: the GALA II and SAGE II studies Perceived discrimination, racial identity, and multisystem stress response to social evaluative threat among African American men and women Stress-related programming of autonomic imbalance: role in allergy and asthma Digital health equity as a necessity in the 21st Century Cures Act era Home visits are needed to address asthma health disparities in adults How academia should respond to racism