NHS Employers welcomes funding for research projects to investigate COVID-19 and ethnicity.
A total of £4.3 million of funding has been awarded to six new research projects to investigate COVID-19 and ethnicity by UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), including £2.1 million for the University of Leicester-led UK-REACH study, investigating the risks of COVID-19 on black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) healthcare workers.
Welcoming the announcement, Danny Mortimer, chief executive of NHS Employers, which is part of the NHS Confederation, said: “These research projects will be absolutely vital in helping to unpick and address the reasons why people from BAME backgrounds are suffering a disproportionate impact from the COVID-19 pandemic. The crisis has cast an inescapable spotlight on racial inequalities, and it’s imperative that we take this opportunity to overcome this.
“We are pleased to be part of the stakeholder group working with Dr Pareek and UK-REACH, as this research will help us to understand why BAME healthcare workers could be at greater risk, and in turn, lead to changes that could protect them. It has the potential to drive major improvements in the lives of healthcare staff who have selflessly put themselves in harm’s way as the UK battles the pandemic.”
NHS Employers, which is part of the NHS Confederation, is the employers’ organisation for the NHS in England. They help employers to develop a sustainable workforce, improve staff experience and be the best employers they can be.
The NHS Confederation has launched the NHS Reset campaign to contribute to the public debate on what the health and care system should look like post-COVID19. Bringing together partners from across health and social care, it aims to recognise the sacrifices and achievements of the COVID period, rebuild local systems and reset the way we plan, commission and deliver health and care.
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Could someone ask PHE why it is obsessed with social inequalities as a leading contributory cause of Covid19 fatalities in BAME groups, yet resolutely ignores the high quality recent research that indicates that a major underlying problem is disparities in the vitamin D status among such groups and the elderly of all races? Waqar Rashid (20 July 2020) it’s immune dysregulation as a result of the virus, and not a direct attack from the virus itself, that is key to a number of Covid deaths. . . . This also may, rightly in my opinion, move more focus onto prevention… Read more »