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Post by nkat on Aug 17, 2020 12:51:31 GMT -5
Heard on CNN this morning that tests are kind of stalled due to not enough Blacks and Hispanics stepping up to participate in the trials.
nkat
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Post by rosa427 on Aug 17, 2020 14:03:17 GMT -5
For fks sake. Context is important, not just sensationalism. (CNN)The multi-billion-dollar effort to get a coronavirus vaccine on the market could see delays because researchers haven't recruited sufficient numbers of minorities to join the clinical trials.Of the 350,000 people who've registered online for a coronavirus clinical trial, 10% are Black or Latino, according to Dr. Jim Kublin, executive director of operations for the Covid-19 Prevention Network. Entire story edition.cnn.com/2020/08/16/health/covid-19-vaccine-trial-black-minority-recruitment/index.htmlNot an excuse, but some clarity for possible reasons.
Michael said several factors have led to "a perfect storm of not goodness" for recruiting Black study subjects: historical abuse of Black people in medical experiments like Tuskegee; present racial injustices and health care disparities; and recent social unrest and the financial strain placed on the Black community by the faltering economy.I'm a black man in a Covid-19 hotspot. I don't have sympathy for people of color who won't social distance I'm a black man in a Covid-19 hotspot. I don't have sympathy for people of color who won't social distance Black leaders agree that it's a challenge to recruit Black people into the vaccine trials, especially since it needs to happen very quickly -- the first two Phase 3 clinical trials started in late July and expect to finish enrollment in September. "This is a very, very tall order," said Dr. James Powell, a Cincinnati physician who has been approached with requests to encourage Black participation in the vaccine trials. "When we Black people hear 'clinical trials,' we think 'we're not going to be researched on,' and that's across economic status and across educational status, not just one sector," said Renee Mahaffey Harris, president of The Center for Closing the Health Gap in Cincinnati. Moderna and Pfizer, the two US companies currently in Phase 3 trials, won't reveal how many of their participants are from minority groups. Each trial eventually expects to recruit 30,000 participants. Moderna's 89 trial sites across the United States are "actively working within their local communities to reach a diverse population of volunteers," Ray Jordan, a company spokesman, wrote in an email. "We hope to achieve a shared goal that the participants in the (Covid-19 vaccine) study are representative of the communities at highest risk for COVID-19 and of our diverse society."
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Post by nkat on Aug 17, 2020 14:18:11 GMT -5
Thank you for posting it Rosa.
Nkat
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