
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


During the initial stages of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, it became abundantly clear that there were no comprehensive surveillance systems in place to systematically collect and/or report race and ethnic data for confirmed COVID-19 cases in Canada. This issue was brought to the forefront when it was reported that Black Americans were more likely than the general American population to be diagnosed with and die from COVID-19. Similar health disparities have also been identified for other people of colour and Indigenous groups in North America. Vivetha Thambinathan joins the Public Health Insight Team to discuss the importance of collecting racial and ethnic demographic data in a culturally appropriate manner, the cautions associated with interpreting data without proper context, as well as some strategies to ensure the data informs public health programming and policies to address health inequities.
Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. We would love it if you shared your thoughts with us through direct message on your social media platform of choice or by emailing us at [email protected].
Icon made by Freepik from www.flaticon.com
Send us a Text Message to let us know what you think.
By PHI Media5
1111 ratings
During the initial stages of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, it became abundantly clear that there were no comprehensive surveillance systems in place to systematically collect and/or report race and ethnic data for confirmed COVID-19 cases in Canada. This issue was brought to the forefront when it was reported that Black Americans were more likely than the general American population to be diagnosed with and die from COVID-19. Similar health disparities have also been identified for other people of colour and Indigenous groups in North America. Vivetha Thambinathan joins the Public Health Insight Team to discuss the importance of collecting racial and ethnic demographic data in a culturally appropriate manner, the cautions associated with interpreting data without proper context, as well as some strategies to ensure the data informs public health programming and policies to address health inequities.
Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. We would love it if you shared your thoughts with us through direct message on your social media platform of choice or by emailing us at [email protected].
Icon made by Freepik from www.flaticon.com
Send us a Text Message to let us know what you think.

400 Listeners

14,604 Listeners

112,394 Listeners

498 Listeners

625 Listeners

44 Listeners

14,966 Listeners

14,446 Listeners

1 Listeners

47 Listeners

3,085 Listeners

2,064 Listeners

643 Listeners

983 Listeners

9,945 Listeners