Tauhric Brown: Black community hit hard by pandemic’s isolation

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Many of us are celebrating the fact that we can gather again with friends and family, go to the grocery without a face mask, watch a ballgame in person and go back to church. Many of us are getting back to the way life used to be pre-COVID.

However, a large percentage of people across our community are suffering in ways we never could have imagined. We have a new mental health crisis we cannot ignore, and it’s hitting the Black community especially hard.

As a community, we must come together to find resources to help our neighbors heal.

The pandemic exposed long-standing inequities related to race, ethnicity and income. Confirmed COVID-19 cases and deaths were higher in predominantly Black communities. Black Americans were nearly five times more likely to be hospitalized and twice as likely to die from the virus than were white Americans.

Staggering job losses because of the pandemic resulted not just in lost incomes but also lost health insurance, increased financial instability, food insecurity and more. We’re seeing escalating cases of anxiety, depression, substance abuse and violence. Even those with access to health care aren’t seeking help because of the stigma of mental illness, which is especially prevalent in African American communities.

A Commonwealth Fund analysis in April found Black and Latino respondents reporting mental health concerns about COVID at a rate 10 points higher than white respondents. Older Black adults also reported increased isolation and lower access to digital communication tools.

As president of CICOA Aging & In-Home Solutions, central Indiana’s largest not-for-profit caring for older adults, people with disabilities and family caregivers, I know firsthand how social isolation and loneliness often result in declines in physical, mental and cognitive health. Many older adults experience chronic loneliness under normal circumstances—the pandemic only heightened anxiety and depression among this already-vulnerable population.

That isolation was met with heightened anxiety and anger following the deaths of George Floyd and others in highly publicized police killings. Take all of those things together, and it’s easy to see the makings of the current mental health crisis.

More than a third of calls to the CICOA call center over the past year were people seeking mental health services. More than 900 of our managed care clients report a mental health diagnosis, and 30% of them are African American.

It’s not just seniors who are suffering. Kids and adults of all ages are increasingly reporting anxiety or feelings of depression. If we don’t do something about it soon, it’s going to lead to more substance abuse, more violence, more poverty and more despair.

We need funds in place for community service in our most impacted neighborhoods, such as Martindale-Brightwood, Eagledale and the near-west side. We need religious leaders to help us educate and advocate.

This is going to take a big effort to solve a serious mental health crisis. Who will join me in working on ways to tackle this serious mental health crisis?•

__________

Tauhric Brown is president and CEO of CICOA Aging & In-Home Solutions, which works to help older adults and people with disabilities in central Indiana live as independently as possible.

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