A Healthcare worker closes a plastic bag containing a coronavirus test kit

Caption

Brandie Hall administers a viral coronavirus test at a July 2020 testing pop up site at the St. Paul AME church parking lot in Macon.

Credit: GPB News/Grant Blankenship

The panel

Professor Amber Schmidtke, @AmberSchmidtke, medical educator and public health microbiologist

Dr. Carlos del Rio, @CarlosdelRio7, executive associate dean, Emory School of Medicine and Grady Health System

Professor Rodney Lyn, Dean of School of Public Health, Georgia State University

 

The breakdown

1. Who's at risk of getting COVID?

  • Three years after COVID-19 was first spotted in the United States, people are still contracting the virus, albeit a less severe variant.
  • Dr. Carlos del Rio says he's mostly seeing Georgians over age 70 in the hospital.

LISTEN: Carlos Del Rio speaks on the population being hospitalized.

2. Vaccine rollout likely confused the public.

  • Dr. del Rio linked overeager promises that a vaccine would bring life back to normal to the rise of the delta variant. He also noted people have fallen behind on their boosters, leading to more serious infections.

LISTEN: Carlos Del Rio on the importance of boosters.

3. The pandemic worsened health care disparities.

  • In Georgia, rural communities often struggled with both health care and broadband access.
  • According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Black and Hispanic patients were treated with the therapeutic Paxlovid far less frequently than white patients.
  • Black patients were already underserved before the pandemic. Black women face higher rates of maternal mortality, breast cancer, or other pregnancy-related causes, regardless of economic class.

LISTEN: Rodney Lyn speaks on Black maternal deaths.

4. How ready are we for the next pandemic?

  • Rodney Lyn thinks we might be behind, but some groups are pushing for progress.
  • Amber Schmidtke says misinformation and disinformation have severely impacted our ability to respond to health crises.

LISTEN: Amber Schmidtke on misinformation.

Monday on Political Rewind: The AJC's Patricia Murphy joins the panel.