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Heroic health care workers deserve our gratitude - Buffalo News

By David Anderson, Michael Cropp and Art Wingerter

There is a war underway against the Covid-19 virus, and the front line is a dangerous place.

Health care providers, including doctors and nurses, and the dedicated professionals in the labs and pharmacies, are in the thick of it every day. By having close contact with patients in their care, these health care professionals are at risk for catching the virus themselves, and then bringing it home to the ones they hold dear. It is a risk they willingly accept, because to them, caring for others is more than their profession, it is their calling.

Serving side by side with doctors and nurses in this battle are the men and women who provide hands-on support. Their call to serve is just as strong. This includes health care aides who tend to patient needs, the people who keep building systems operational, the food service professionals, the staff who clean and disinfect, the guards who keep the buildings safe and secure and the administrators who are responsible for the paperwork that underlies it all. Because of their proximity to those who are sick, they too are at risk for catching Covid-19, as are their loved ones at home, and those with whom they come in contact as they travel to and from work.

We must not overlook the exceptional providers of care who serve the needs of the sick, injured and frail in patients’ own apartments and homes. Their risk may be even greater because of environmental factors that are beyond their control at the site, or sites, they visit each day.

Front line health care workers who are African American are particularly vulnerable to the lethal nature of the Covid-19 virus. Nationally, and here in Erie County, the chronic conditions that are significantly more prevalent among African Americans – diabetes, hypertension, obesity, asthma – combined with the social determinants of health found in many urban ZIP codes, including poverty and poor housing, are resulting in this outbreak spreading among the African American community and causing a disproportionate number of admissions to intensive care units, and deaths.

In our lifetimes, we have never experienced a health care crisis like this. We may never again see a mobilization of health care services like the one we are witnessing. It is important to understand and address differences in risk that exist across populations.

Each day – from prior to this pandemic, to well after it is resolved – we benefit from the selfless dedication of the people across our community who stand ready, when needed, to serve and care for the sick and injured. We owe them our thanks and our gratitude.

David W. Anderson is CEO of BlueCross BlueShield of Western New York, Michael W. Cropp, M.D., is president and CEO of Independent Health and Arthur G. Wingerter is president of Univera Healthcare.

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Heroic health care workers deserve our gratitude - Buffalo News
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