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Six feet apart or six feet under: The impact of COVID-19 on the Black community

Sharon E. Moore, Sharon D. Jones-Eversley, Willie Tolliver, Betty L. Wilson, Christopher A. Jones

2020Death Studies48 citationsDOI

Abstract

To date, 110,000+ people in the United States have died from the COVID-19 pandemic. In this paper, the authors will discuss COVID-19 relative to Black people and their overrepresentation among those who are infected and died from the disease. Their dying, death, and grief experiences are explored through a cultural and spiritual lens. The physical distancing, social isolation, misinformation, and restrictive burials and cremations now elicited by this unprecedented pandemic have had diminished familial, cultural, emotional, and economic impacts on the Black community. Implications for public health and Black peoples' involvement in the political process are also addressed.

Topics & Concepts

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)MisinformationPandemicSocial distanceSocial isolationGrief2019-20 coronavirus outbreakDistancingIsolation (microbiology)Public healthPoliticsRacismSociologyMedicineDiseasePolitical scienceGender studiesPsychiatryVirologyNursingInfectious disease (medical specialty)OutbreakMicrobiologyPathologyBiologyLawFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsHealth disparities and outcomesMigration, Health and Trauma
Six feet apart or six feet under: The impact of COVID-19 on the Black community | Litcius