10/27
2020
Donna M. Loring Lecture Series

Racial Health Disparities and COVID-19 in Maine: Shining a Light on Systemic Inequality

12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
Maine Women Writers Collection
Online
Crystal Cron, Fatuma Hussein, Rachel Talbot Ross, Lisa Sockabasin

Maine is home to the worst COVID-19 racial disparity in the country, with Black and African American Mainers being impacted at an egregiously disproportionate rate. While public discourse focuses on people with “underlying health conditions” as being at greater risk of contracting COVID-19, this hides the realities of systemic racism and economic inequality at the core of such conditions. Health advocates and leaders from Maine’s Black, immigrant, Indigenous and Latinx communities will discuss how the pandemic has highlighted the systemic inequalities in food access, health care, housing and income in Maine and the United States. Panelists will discuss ways that health professionals can better serve these communities by understanding the myriad challenges their patients face in an unequal society.

Speakers

Crystal Cron, President of Presente! Maine
Fatuma Hussein, Executive Director, Immigrant Resource Center of Maine
Rachel Talbot Ross, ME State Representative; Chair, Commission on Status of Racial, Indigenous, and Maine Tribal Populations
Lisa Sockabasin, Director of Programs & External Affairs, Wabanaki Public Health 

Address

Maine Women Writers Collection
716 Stevens Avenue
Portland, ME 04103
United States

Contact

Cathleen Miller
Maine Women Writers Collection