Seeing ‘a huge gap’, activist’s goal is to bring accurate COVID information to people of color – CT Insider

Crystal R. Emery said she knows that if Black, Hispanic and Indigenous people are going to protect themselves from COVID-19 and become willing to be vaccinated, the messenger is as important as the message.

Emery, a New Haven-area filmmaker who is quadriplegic, has never let her disability stop her from improving the lives of other people of color. She has Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, which affects the bodys peripheral nerves, as well as diabetes.

Now, Emery, 59, has teamed up with a range of people of color including churches and other community groups, to bring accurate information to people who have been mistrustful of media and who may receive inaccurate information from social media.

Nobody knows what to believe. Nobody knows what is real, Emery said. All of the Black and brown people were not getting the right information from sources that they respect. Those same communities have been the hardest hit by the pandemic, suffering disproportionately in the number of cases and deaths.

Through a video series, texts and infographics, Emery and her organization, URU The Right to Be, has launched Our Humanity, a project of really dealing with peoples mindsets and belief systems, she said.

Theres a huge gap here, and what I do well is creating information that lowers peoples defense mechanisms and that allows a new way or a different way to look at something, Emery said. It allows a clearer understanding of what those issues are.

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She has the backing of former Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders and once and future Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, clergy, including the Rev. Boise Kimber and Bishop Theodore Brooks in New Haven and the Rev. Charles Stallworth in Bridgeport, and community leaders, including former New Haven Mayor Toni Harp and Karen DuBois-Walton, president of the Housing Authority of New Haven.

COVID has made the reality of racial and ethnic disparities in health care more stark than ever, Emery said. The CDC, the American Medical Association have all come out and said racism is a public health crisis, she said. The first part of bridging that gap is really creating prevention awareness that really looks like us. We have over 70 videos made by Black and brown doctors.

Its videos, its Instagram Live every Wednesday, where I have different experts speaking, where people can ask questions, make comments, Emery said.

Our goal is to reach at least 200,000 to 400,000 Black and brown people across the state, Emery said.

Online workshops will be offered in English and Spanish and faith and community leaders will be trained to disseminate information.

I call them community educators, Emery said. You have the direct touch but then you have the people that they touch.

Because getting both COVID and the flu is a no-win situation, she is working with Cornell Scott-Hill Health Center on both testing and immunizations.

There is so much to teach: how to properly wash hands and keep jewelry clean, understanding who youve come in contact with. You may think your bubble is two levels deep but in actuality its 10 levels deep, Emery said. You have to do this person by person. You cant send an email. If it was that easy, a lot fewer people would have become infected with the coronavirus, she said.

The infographics have been created by Shanina Knighton, a nurse and infection prevention researcher at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, who has focused on getting the details across in an easy-to-understand way. The advice to wear a mask isnt helpful if someone doesnt know to keep it up over the nose or how to keep it clean, Knighton said.

Knighton said she would walk up to people and ask them if they understood her posters. If you dont understand it within 15 seconds of looking at it, I kept going back to the drawing board to make sure things make sense, she said.

DuBois-Walton said Emery has been an amazing whirlwind of activity. Shes just laser-focused on informing people of color and making sure the messaging thats developed is the messaging that will resonate in those communities, she said. She added she hoped the state would follow suit in its efforts to get Black, brown and Indigenous people tested and vaccinated.

Im so excited to be working with her on something thats right here in her backyard, DuBois-Walton said.

Kimber, pastor of First Calvary Baptist Church and president of the Greater New Haven Clergy Association, said hes been working with Emery to get the message out to the community that is affected the most. Thats where I feel that the state ought to be spending some time in how theyre going to get into the community.

He said the Black church is a primary way to reach the Black community and the churches have been made available for drive-through flu shots. We would hate for our people to get the flu and COVID at the same time, Kimber said. Theres nothing but death there.

Another supporter, the Rev. Abraham Hernandez, associate pastor of Grace Fellowship Church in East Haven, said, I believe that it is necessary to have a calculated and intentional effort, because its evident that the message has either not been effectively communicated to our people or we may need more of it.

Hernandez is executive director of the Connecticut chapter of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, representing 300 evangelical churches. We believe the houses of worship are institutions of trust as well as community service agencies, he said. Our medical experts are people the community looks up to and trusts and our hope is to support those on the front lines by ramping our communication efforts.

Hernandez said Emery has the heart of a lion. She is so passionate about our minority communities and she has always been 100 percent committed to shining a light on the shortfalls. She chooses to be part of the solution. Were all in this together.

The Rev. Charles Stallworth, senior pastor of East End Baptist Tabernacle Church in Bridgeport, as well as a state representative, said Emery is putting forth a great effort. There are multiple outlets right now, so the struggle is which one is going to be most relevant, which one is going to be funded.

He said there has been mistrust about the COVID vaccine, because there was a perception initially to be a rush getting something out by the Trump administration. But while not wanting to force it on people who dont believe, Stallworth said he is trying to be as informative as possible and will get vaccinated when he is able to.

He called Emery one of those few persons that you get to meet in a lifetime who against all odds is out front leading. Her compassion and concern for others is remarkable.

edward.stannard@hearstmediact.com; 203-680-9382

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Seeing 'a huge gap', activist's goal is to bring accurate COVID information to people of color - CT Insider

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