Person Anna K
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Open Forum Infect Dis. 2020 Oct 23;7(11):ofaa510. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofaa510. eCollection 2020 Nov.
The disparate effects of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 virus on communities of color, paired with disjointed federal and local responses to the pandemic and the ongoing examples of structural racism's effects on health, highlight the need for physician advocacy on behalf of patients. The job of infectious disease physicians has always involved caring for the "whole patient," but the need for advocacy around issues related to racism, housing, food insecurity, substance use disorders, and mental health has increased. Advocacy at all levels-local, regional, and national-can make a difference and be a profoundly rewarding part of the career of an infectious disease/HIV physician.
严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2对有色人种社区产生了不同影响,再加上联邦和地方对疫情的反应脱节,以及结构性种族主义对健康影响的持续实例,凸显了医生为患者进行倡导的必要性。传染病医生的工作一直都涉及照顾“完整的患者”,但围绕种族主义、住房、粮食不安全、物质使用障碍和心理健康等问题进行倡导的需求有所增加。地方、区域和国家各级的倡导都能产生影响,并且可以成为传染病/艾滋病毒医生职业生涯中极具意义的一部分。