Minority Health
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COVID-19 Information for CUPS/Ferguson Program
Important information about the 2020 CUPS/Ferguson Program
Minority Health Determines the Health of the Nation – The United States has become increasingly diverse in the last century. According to the 2010 U.S. Census, approximately 36 percent of the population belongs to a racial or ethnic minority group. Though health indicators such as life expectancy and infant mortality have improved for most Americans, some minorities experience a disproportionate burden of preventable disease, death, and disability compared with non-minorities.
COVID-19 Articles on Health Equity
- Addressing Influenza Vaccination Disparities During the COVID-19 Pandemicexternal icon
- Association between social vulnerability and a county’s risk for becoming a COVID-19 hotspot — United States, June 1–July 25, 2020
- COVID-19 Among American Indian and Alaska Native Persons — 23 States, January 31–July 3, 2020
- Race, Ethnicity, and Age Trends in Persons Who Died from COVID-19 — United States, May–August 2020
- Race/Ethnicity, Underlying Medical Conditions, Homelessness, and Hospitalization Status of Adult Patients with COVID-19 at an Urban Safety-Net Medical Center — Boston, Massachusetts, 2020
- Responder Story: Why COVID-19 Will Hit “Marjorie” Harder
COVID-19 Webinars on Health Equity
Page last reviewed: November 23, 2020
Content source: Office of Minority Health & Health Equity (OMHHE)