Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Sawbones: Medical Racism and Protest Safety
Episode Date: June 1, 2020This week on Sawbones, we examine how Black Americans have received substandard care and fewer opportunities within the American medical system. Also, some guidance on how to protest as safely as poss...ible in the face of COVID-19.Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Saubones is a show about medical history, and nothing the hosts say should be taken as medical advice or opinion.
It's for fun. Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil?
We think you've earned it. Just sit back, relax, and enjoy a moment of distraction from that weird growth.
You're worth it.
that weird growth. You're worth it.
Alright, time is about to books.
One, two, one, two, three, four. Hello everybody and welcome to Saw Bones,
a metal tour of Miss Guy in Medicine.
I'm your co-host Justin McElroy.
And I'm Sydney McElroy.
Uh, well, this episode is coming a little later
than Saw Bones classically has been.
We've been trying to be more regularly, honestly.
Yeah, we wanted to be completely transparent
as to why this episode isn't on time.
We had initially planned, and we never do this on the show, I feel like.
It's, yeah.
It was, it was, it's a rarity.
Certainly, we planned on a very lighthearted silly episode initially this week, based
on multiple listeners.
Oh, don't spoil it because we'll still do it.
You don't mean to spoil it?
No, no.
I'll keep it a secret.
It's gonna be a silly one.
It was gonna be very silly, though.
And in light of what's happening in our country,
it seemed, it is incredibly inappropriate.
And so we didn't want to put that out
into the world right now.
That was not what anyone needed to hear.
But at the same time, it took me some time and Justin, I know you helping me to try to figure out what
exactly we had to say. Right. That we we could that that we were
Well me that I have the expertise to add to the conversation
Defense as white people were trying to listen as much as we can and we didn't know if we would have anything valuable
To say right now. I think it would be the honest way of putting it
Exactly, I think I think the primary voices we should be listening to right now are members of the black community
and not us white people.
We need to do a lot more listening.
We've talked for way too long.
So I thought about what I do have knowledge in and that's medicine and specifically medical
history.
Obviously, that's why we do the show.
And right now, while the recent murder of George Floyd
by a white police officer in Minneapolis
is not related to the medical field precisely,
criminal justice and the systemic racism
in our criminal justice system and law enforcement
is not my area of expertise. But the racism that exists in the medical system is within, I think,
my purview and certainly within my duty to confront, not just as a physician in the system on behalf of my patients,
but when I see it in my colleagues
and in the students and residents that I train,
and in all of the other members of the medical profession,
not just physicians that I work with on a regular basis.
And I, as a podcaster, am also talking into a microphone.
I don't have as high a call, I said he does.
And admittedly, but I am here and I hope that that is the right thing to be doing.
I feel I think that's right. I hope that that's right. I have.
I'm trying my best. Well, I have been very vocal about the fact that we have this platform,
whatever size it may be, to talk about the things that are within our
purview, to talk about, and that I would be remiss if I didn't use it to do whatever good I am capable of doing.
I keep saying me, but I don't mean to leave you out. It's just that I do.
No, it's absolutely legit. For sure, for sure, for sure. Now Sidney, I
for sure, for sure. Now, Sid, I would remind people that a lot of times on
Sabons, I pretend to be Dumber than I actually am
to keep the conversation moving.
I just wanted to say that first.
Sure.
So you're telling me there's racism in medicine too?
It is not shocking to anyone listening.
I would hope that racism is unfortunately built into the structure
of every institution in our nation's history
and in our current society today.
And it infiltrates every aspect of society
and certainly when it comes to medicine,
medical care, access,
whether to preventive services or life-saving services, proper diagnoses, proper treatment
is not an exception to this, unfortunately.
And I wanted to just kind of briefly go into some of the historical roots of this.
It's really a racism.
No, of this is going to be a long episode.
Specifically, racism in medicine, racial disparities,
and the racism that exists in the medical system
in the United States.
That is all I can speak to with any degree
of understanding is what
we have experienced in this country. Certainly it's different. Obviously outside of the
US.
Sure. There are a lot of reasons, and I think it's always important to talk about when
you start talking about the disparities between two groups. You need to start doing the hard
work of digging into the data and figuring out why it's all there because as a lot of
smart people have pointed out before me if you just say
that it's worse for
One racial group than it is for another and you don't seek to understand why well first of all you can't fix it and
Secondly, people began to fill that gap of knowledge with their own ideas and opinions and a lot of these are not helpful and can actually be really harmful and
reinforce really negative views of a racial demographic.
Like the idea that for instance, when it comes to health outcomes for
black people and white people in this country, well, is it just because
socioeconomic status?
We'll just fill in that gap.
It's all related to poverty and that's the problem
and we figured it out.
And that doesn't address it, it doesn't solve it,
and that's not based on data, that's based on guesswork.
I'm not saying that doesn't contribute to it,
but just as an example, it's obviously more complicated.
And so you've got to look for these reasons
so that you can address it properly.
Insurance coverage is part of the socioeconomic status plays into this access to physicians, to specialists, to hospitals. But then there's something that has to do with the attitudes of the
people providing the care. There's a whole other piece to this that isn't about this nebulous system, but the people in it,
which is a lot harder to talk about,
and to face if you're a member of that system.
And especially for all of you who are white like we are,
it can be a really hard, long look in the mirror
that you have to do, and then guess what?
You gotta do it again the next day,
and the next day and the next day and the next day and every day
Mm-hmm, and it's hard work that we should be doing
The root of this issue in our country is not is not hearted. It's
It's America folks. You right we we stole the land. We built it with slave labor. I mean, it's
It's it's it's in our it's in our bones and I should say I'm focusing
in this episode specifically about
racist attitudes towards black Americans throughout our history.
Obviously, there are there's much more that could be said about
Native Americans. There's much more that could be said about all other ethnic minorities in this country who are treated differently than white people.
All non-white people are not afforded that same privilege when it comes to medical care.
But I wanted to focus because of everything that our understanding of race in the United States,
you're really talking about what is called scientific racism.
So that would be the, is that kind of like in the same, I'm taking you guys here, I have no idea.
Is that like same family as eugenics, sort of like finding the scientific reasons
why one race is scientifically superior to, it's kind of a snooty, high-falutin racism
with a monocle and everything.
Yes. Yes. You are, eugenics is the eventual evolution of scientific, of like the early
forms of scientific racism in the early days of the United States of America.
And this was used to justify in
Slaving
you know
People from Africa who were brought to the United States. They are less to the colonies. They are less than we are
It is our moral right to
than we are, it is our moral right to subscate them. And this was down to the belief that,
and I don't know if this was always,
if it was my belief,
I don't know if I needed to do so.
Oh, it's not just because I know about this from books.
Obviously, I don't think this,
I don't, I shouldn't have to say that at that point,
but you know what, I'm gonna go ahead and say it.
I don't know.
Let's just go ahead and get that out there.
I actually think that it is important for us
to say these obvious things right now.
Yeah.
Because if you look at our country's leadership,
it's not as obvious as it should be.
But when at this time, the idea was not just
that some humans are better than others.
That was definitely baked into this idea.
But it was also that there are different species of human.
So it was actually like the hierarchy was very scientifically like the groundwork for
it was laid in a very sciencey way in the sense that our physical
characteristics and skin color delineate,
there were believed to be four different species
of human essentially, which not only then
are you saying a white human at this time period,
a scientist would say a white human is better
than a black human.
They are human in the way that we understand.
They're different kinds of human.
They're different. Just like we know that there are lots of different species of this type of
butterfly or whatever. We are different species of human. This is obviously not true,
but this belief was held for a long time. And the idea that ending slavery in this country
will automatically make those
beliefs go away, obviously, as flawed.
And the origins of that theory, by the way, of course, predate America.
The scientific not the, you know, but the theory of scientific racism and immigration.
Yes.
The idea that there are different species of human and that there are superior humans
and inferior humans
This obviously didn't this was not born out of the United States
We talk about a lot of historical figures that added to kind of the body of knowledge that would lead to these theories
Hippocrates noted
differences it was largely based on the geographic regions that people were from.
And he thought they represented different types of humans.
Avocena said the same thing and even theorized as to some natural superiortes and
inferiorities between different races. Linnaeus helped draw these connections
between this type of person looks like this and this is what I would categorize this human species as.
And all of that coming from more of a wear cataloging provided the body of knowledge that would lead to these theories of the lead to scientific racism, the idea that one human is better than another. And that's, begin to tie health characteristics to race as well. Again, as early as
topocrates, you see kind of these sort of like social characteristics and behaviors and
personality types and also health identities tied to race. It's, I mean, all throughout human
history, we've been cataloging other humans and then
making generalizations about them based on what we observe. When it came to the early days
of the United States, there were really two healthcare systems. There was the regular medical system, healthcare system that was accessible
by white people. And then there was a kind of separate but definitely not as high quality
healthcare system. I think it's very clear to say these are not, these are in no way equal. That was afforded to the enslaved people
who were owned by white people. And this sort of companion system were usually laypersons,
herbal healers, midwives, sometimes like the, if it was like a large plantation or something, the owner's wife may be responsible for medical care for the people who were enslaved.
Occasionally, it would involve a physician, but all of this was just to meet the needs of the owners.
Plantation owner, right? Yes.
It was very much directed at, we will only expend the time or money that is necessary to
keep someone able to function in their job.
And they're not going to say, it's a property, yes.
Basically, rather than as human beings.
Exactly, exactly.
Not really for the good of the patient.
And we have discussed this at great length in our episode
about J. Marion Sims and the horrific surgical experimentation
that he performed on enslaved black women
with no anesthesia multiple times
in order to perfect a surgical technique.
And this was based on this belief that black people did not experience pain the way that white people do.
Which, again, speaks to this scientific racism. They're different. They're fundamentally different.
It's interesting to note that if you were a free black American at this point in history, you essentially had no health care.
You would kind of fall into the cracks.
When I say American, there weren't no Americans yet, really.
Well, no, we were post-revolution pre-civil work.
Yeah, we are.
Yes, yeah, American.
But either way, even before revolution, after revolution,
if you were a free black person, you had no health care.
You were on neither side of this divide.
Exactly.
You were excluded from the white system because of segregation before we called it segregation.
It was just assumed, obviously, you would not be allowed.
And then you were not going to be afforded any sort of care that someone who was enslaved
would get. So they basically had no access to any sort of physicians
and had to within their own community kind of figure out their
and medical needs.
Yeah.
The, this legacy continued, of course, as we move past slavery
into all of the segregation
and the Jim Crow era in the South.
There was still an idea that there was a fundamental difference.
And again, I know this sounds to me,
like if you really wrap your mind around this,
if you are a good person, The idea that there is such a
fundamental difference between white people and black people, that we need to come
up with a separate set of diagnoses, which there was indeed a handbook that was
separate for the diagnoses of a black patient than a white patient. The idea being that the very basic physiology
that underlies a health condition, the reason you have high blood pressure, the reason you
have diabetes is different in a black person than in a white person. This belief was held
by doctors by and large at that time. So you wouldn't be treated the same
because the disease was fundamentally different
in your body because it was a different thing completely.
And of course, we wouldn't understand it as well
because nobody was putting in the time or effort
to understand it.
And in segregated areas, which was most of most areas,
you were only allowed to, you would only have
access to see the black doctors go to the black hospitals that were available to you, and
there were so many fewer than there were white doctors and white hospitals.
So the treatments would differ.
And there, of course, were all all these examples like we've talked about
misled beliefs about like pain tolerance and things like that
If you go if you went into predominantly black areas in the south and black counties
There was obviously as I've already talked about a not a lot of hospitals or medical professionals to be found
in order to to get more black doctors to provide care for the black community,
you had to have black medical schools for them to attend.
And there weren't very many of those either.
And so all these were hurdles for people being able
to even see a doctor.
Sure.
You know, if you're sick, just be able to get care. As a result of all this,
by the year 1900, about 2% of medical professionals in this country were black. And that, knowing our
history, that number did not shock me, right? In the year 1900, only 2%, it's a very small percentage.
It is not adequate to provide care for the number of black Americans, but at the same time,
it's the year 1900.
We're not that far out from slavery.
It made sense to me.
The wild part of the statistic, the second half, is that that 2% did not change much until
the early 1980s. That's in our lifetime.
You like to think that you're so far removed from, I mean, it's just another reminder.
Like, when we talk about, when you hear about things like systemic racism, like, this is
what, I mean, this is what it's about.
Like, the systems have been in place and been keeping people, you know, out of professions like medicine for decades.
And if you add to the fact that you don't have enough doctors, you don't know, or enough nurses, or enough, you know, lab techs, or enough, all the other people that support the doctors, all the medical professionals you need to run a hospital, to run a doctor's office, to provide preventive services, to provide emergencies, all that stuff. You don't have enough of any of
that. You know, people live in communities where they are hours away from the nearest doctor or hospital,
so that there's no access. Plus, then you add in their health insurance and how many black Americans
were in remain or underinsured. So, even if you did have a hospital or a doctor,
you could see could you afford to?
Plus all of the other issues
beyond like the criminal justice system,
but the educational system,
the fact that black schools were underfunded
and were not able to provide as much
in terms of resources for the students,
the fact that housing discrimination existed,
you know, you just layer all that on top of and transportation issues to get to the doctor,
you layer all that on top of all of this and you can see where, you know, the health outcomes are not going to get better
until all of that is addressed.
By the way, the percentage of,
they did a study asking active physicians in the United States
to self-identify their race.
And the percent that identified as black in this country
is 6%, it's about 6%.
That is still so wildly low. And again, it's all these reasons we just talked
about that have not been solved today that maybe some are better, but they are not gone.
And then there's this whole other issue. So we've talked about all these all these structural problems all these systemic problems
But this view of of black people and white people is fundamentally different and that there is an inferior and superior race all of this
Which would eventually result in eugenics as you as you talked about and we've done a whole episode on that
If you then take into account specific examples like what happened in Tuskegee when 600, about 600
black airmen were put into a study of syphilis without informed consent, without being really told
what was being done to them.
Some received, a few received treatment, many did not, but they were lied to and led to
believe they were receiving treatment.
And they weren't even, I read this, I don't know if I said this the last time we talked
about Tuskegee on this show, but many were just told they had, quote, unquote, bad blood.
And while that was a term used for syphilis, it was also used for a variety of other disorders
at the time.
So they weren't even properly informed
as to what they were, what they had or not being treated for.
The study started in 1932.
We found that penicillin was an effective treatment
for syphilis in 1945, but the study continued until 1972,
with these black men remaining untreated for the syphilis that the doctors knew they
had.
And many, many doctors and scientists and medical students were complicit in this as the
study went on through all of these years.
If you take that into account, along with the fact that we have a history of surgeons,
especially in the American South, removing black women's uterus without asking them or
obtaining consent, doing hysterectomies so that they could no longer have children without
actually them desiring for that procedure to be done. When you take into account that
throughout any time there's been reform in the medical education system in
this country, it's resulted in the closure of black medical schools and black
hospitals where black doctors could train providing them with fewer
opportunities to go to school to to become doctors, to help change
the medical profession.
And if you add into that the story of Henry Adelaques, who we've referenced on the show
before and there's the wonderful books and I mean there's a lot of information out there
you can learn now about Henry Adelaques who had cervical cancer and after she unfortunately
passed away, the tissue from
her cervical cells, which turned out to be a very robust cell line that was good for
medical research, has been used and continues to be used throughout medical labs all over
the country without any consent from her or her family or knowledge.
If you take all that into account, it's easy to see the other part of this story,
which is white doctors who are not going to be as compassionate or as considerate or
as understanding of their black patients for many of these years. And even as things hopefully are changing,
still have that legacy, still have grown up with that,
that privilege, that white supremacy
that they've been surrounded with their whole youth.
That is the, that's, again, to keep harboring on this,
because I think it's easy to, especially for a white person
to miss stuff like this.
I know I do every day that's part of privilege is not noticing things like this.
But like the structure, the medicine has a skeleton that is millennia old and a lot of
those bones were put in place when people thought the black people
might people were a different species. Like when we talk about systemic, like that's, but the
you know, even if you directly are trying to push against it in your own head, you're in a system
that was built on some really terrible assumptions. And even like your basic understanding of
assumptions. And even like your basic understanding of kind of like populations, big studies that have told us what the course of a chronic diseases or how much what medications are appropriate
or what the prognosis of a certain diseases, any of these things, you have to consider that
throughout most of our medical history, they've largely been done with like to figure out the best course of treatment for white participants.
Black participants were rarely included.
And I thought that this was a fascinating study that was done recently that looked at how
much in terms of monetary resources, patients, specifically, I think it was like a Medicare
study to see like how much they would need.
And what they found is that when they, and they actually used a diverse patient population
base to figure out this number, what they found is that the amount they settled on was
way less than the average white patient needed.
But was only less than a very small percentage of the average black patient needed.
And they said, well, why do black Americans need less care than white Americans?
And the truth is, it's not that they need less.
It's that they get less.
And so that's what it was reflecting is that these black patients were not getting as much
preventive care.
We're not getting appropriate follow-ups and diagnostic procedures and medications prescribed and surgeries
They needed and all these other things not because they didn't need them. They just weren't getting them
And so it looked like they were costing and well they cost so much less to the system because the system isn't taking care of them
But this is not history all of this that we're talking about this this isn't the past but this still
Again, this still all exists today.
Currently, we talk about how there was this misconception that black people had a higher
pain tolerance or didn't feel pain the way that white people did.
Black patients are still less likely to receive adequate pain control, especially in an emergency
room setting.
For the same painful condition that I as a white woman would walk in for the black
patient will receive less pain medication because it did not believe that they're in as much
pain.
They are less likely to have access to needed cancer treating surgeries.
There was a study done that proved that they're less likely to get cholesterol lowering medications
when they are indicated.
They, in black women, are 40% less likely in some areas to receive
mammograms at appropriate intervals. So even preventive services, screening,
you know, to catch cancer early, all of that, less likely to be performed
adequately in especially and predominantly black communities, predominantly
black counties than in the white population. And it extends beyond the ER because a lot of this you could pass off as like,
well, maybe in an ER setting where the doctor doesn't know the patients and then you just get that
and you know, we're hearing this a lot right now when it comes to the criminal justice system
and police officers, the one bad apple. Maybe it's just that one doctor who's the bad apple in the ER
However, we find that these
These disparities extend unfortunately into the primary care office which hits close to home for me as a primary care
Physician because you have in the ER if a black patient and a white patient both come in having a heart
attack, the white patient is actually more likely to receive the emergent cardiovascular
procedures that they need, including cabbage, open heart surgery than the black patient,
which is a lot like this should be that easy.
It's a heart attack, it's a heart attack, right?
Still.
But even in the primary care office,
when it comes to chronic disease management,
if we have a white patient and a black patient
of the same age and disease severity
who both have diabetes,
the white patient will have better health outcomes,
better control of that condition long-term
and suffer fewer complications
than the black
patient with the same diagnosis and same disease severity.
Why?
The why is a lot harder to answer.
There are many, many factors.
As I said, you don't want to just leave it open to interpretation.
A lot of these we've already mentioned. Access to care is a big problem.
Again, there are still not enough medical offices, physicians,
nurses, hospitals, and predominantly black communities.
All of that is part of the problem.
Access to care in terms of being able to afford it,
affordable care, transportation to and from being able to afford prescriptions to properly manage
a chronic disease, being able to, it goes into your job, what type of job do you hold?
Are you able to miss work when you're sick to properly take care of yourself?
Are you able to miss work to go get diagnostic procedures or preventive
screening services that you might need?
All of those things, immunization levels are lower.
So are you getting the immunizations that will keep you healthy?
All of that plays into it.
But then I think that everything we've just talked about, these attitudes, the scientific
racism, the use of black patients as experimental subjects throughout history,
it has created this fundamental distrust and lack of open communication between the medical system
and the black patients who need access to it. And it's something that I, you know, we talked about somewhat in medical school, but certainly not enough.
I know because I'm involved in our medical school's curriculum that it's talked about more now,
but until all of these numbers change, would you say that it's being talked about enough?
No. No? No.
No.
No.
Until health outcomes are equal,
it's not being talked about enough.
And that's not even,
even as I was putting this episode together,
today, the Johns Hopkins School for Public Health
came out with a whole new statement,
talking about, again, even more statistics,
African-American babies
die before their first birthday at more than twice the rate of white newborns, African-American
women die at more than twice the rate of other women during pregnancy and childbirth.
The life expectancy of African-Americans is three and a half years shorter than for white
Americans.
And then finally, COVID, it bears mentioning that when we talk about the rate of disease severity of people
who get severe cases of COVID and who die of COVID and then just sheer number of who
is getting COVID, it's disproportionately higher among black Americans.
And if you look state by state, almost every single state, almost every single state in
the country has had a disproportionately high number of their black population getting
coronavirus as compared to their population, like more than you would expect for the number
of actual black people who live in that part of the country. Even here in our state of West Virginia,
which I believe our stat is that only about three
and a half percent of the population of West Virginia
is black.
Twice that number of coronavirus cases
are among black West Virginians.
In some counties, in this state, we have 55 counties.
I can't tell you why. We're like, we're very state, we have 55 counties. I can't tell you why.
We're like, we're very tiny and we have 55 counties.
In some of these counties, 20 to 30% of the patients
who have coronavirus are black.
That those are ridiculous statistics for a state
that is as overwhelmingly white as West Virginia is. Black mortality from
COVID is estimated. Most of the stats I saw is twice as high as white mortality from COVID
in this country as a whole. I've seen some studies that estimate that it's maybe three
and a half times as high. And again, all of this has to do with all these things we've
just talked about with the rate of underlying health
conditions that are not being properly managed
for a variety of different reasons.
And then other social determinants employment
access to health insurance, medical care, poor air and water
quality in communities where people of color live.
All of this plays into the fact that
people are black people in this country are dying from COVID at a much higher rate than
you would expect based on our population and demographics. And in addition to all this,
relevant specifically to what is happening right now, the Johns Hopkins School for Public
Health also in the same statement today called
law enforcement violence a public health issue. And this is especially for black Americans.
So yet another social determinant of health, the mistreatment of black Americans by a criminal
justice system by our law enforcement agencies is yet another reason why their life, why a black
person's life expectancy is lower than you would expect in this, in this country.
So these protests concern medical professionals.
Well, they should concern everybody.
Well, they should concern everybody.
Maybe I'm alone in that to me, but I find all of them are concerned.
It's a, it's a public health issue, which means doctors should be organizing and speaking out about
it as well.
Speaking of public health issues, you and I have talked a lot about the protesting and
COVID and safety.
And I know that you want to talk a little bit about that, about protesting and how to
do it as safely as possible.
So, right now, a couple things,
you'll find a lot of these resources out there
if you're someone who is thinking of going and attending
one of these protests.
Some really obvious things,
you may be out there for a long time
and it may be difficult to immediately return back home.
So bring things like water, it's hot in most
places right now. Bring water, bring snacks, wear sunscreen, because specifically of coronavirus,
please, if you're going to go out and protest in public wear a mask or a bandana or some
sort of face covering over your nose and mouth. That is the safest thing you can do.
A lot of people are still recommending social distancing
at these events.
And yes, obviously, that would be ideal
if everyone was six feet apart,
but that's also a really unrealistic statement to make.
So wearing a mask, wearing a face covering
is still a very important thing you can do.
A good piece of advice, write your name, your birthday,
and the phone number of your emergency contact and name on your arm, like in marker and
like a sharpie or something, big letters, in case something happens to you, where you're
incapacitated, where you're unconscious, and somebody needs to get in touch with, you
know, figure out who you are and how to get in touch with your friend or family as soon as possible.
I've seen a lot of conflicting advice about your phone.
The best medical advice would be to have your phone fully charged and with you because
if one of your friends or family has find your phone and can find you in case you get lost,
that of course is a good thing.
However, I know on the flip side,
there have been some people suggesting
that perhaps you're more easily located by law enforcement.
So what, listen folks, we don't know on this one.
Okay, bring two phones, turn one off, leave the other one on.
I don't know what to say.
I've seen a lot of suggestions for a burner phone.
Burner phone? I don't know.
Listen, we're out of our debt.
This is a world I don't know where we're at. But tell someone where you'll be. Something with the phones, okay folks. Something a burner phone. burner phone? I don't know. We're out of our debt. This is a world I don't know. We're out of our debt.
But tell someone where you'll be.
Something with the phones.
Okay folks, something with the phone.
Please let people know where you're going.
Where exactly what location you are planning to be at.
If you are sick, my advice would be stay home.
Especially if you suspect you may have coronavirus, please, please stay home.
You don't want to make that decision for everybody else. No. You don't want to make that decision for everybody else.
No, you don't get to make that decision for everybody else.
If you are someone who takes medication, especially medication that is life-sustaining on a daily
basis, and it would be highly detrimental for you to be away from that medication for a
day or perhaps longer, I would also consider that before you decide to go protest because many protesters are being
arrested, detained for unknown amounts of time, and if you cannot guarantee your medication
would come with you, and it is not advised that you carry anything like that on you.
Some things you may, those seem obvious, some things you may not have thought of. I know it a lot of these protests, pepper spray, mace, and tear
gas are being used on protesters by police officers. So some advice specifically for that.
One is don't wear contacts. This is in reference to tear gas. So tear gas is actually, it's
actually a solid. Tear gas is actually, it's actually a solid.
Tear gas is used to describe a number of different chemical agents that will indeed make
you tear up, but will also irritate your airways. You'll produce a great deal of mucous
and snot and have difficulty breathing. They're very uncomfortable agents is what everyone,
this is my understanding. So if you wear contacts, you can actually get
the powder stuck between the surface of your eye
and the contact, which as you may imagine.
It sucks.
Yes, it's incredibly painful.
So don't wear contacts.
When it comes to tear gas specifically,
the more skin that is covered, the better,
because if the powder lands on your clothes,
you can remove your clothes and it's off of you.
That's the easiest, you can get yourself out of the area
and strip down is the best way to get it off of you.
So, I'm always wearing tear-away pants, actually.
So that's huge for me.
I'm like halfway there.
The tear-away pants are excellent.
But yeah, so the more of your body that's covered,
that your face is covered, goggles, if you have them, but that's a tall order,
but goggles would be good.
Steam punk, not steam punk, where are we at on that?
I mean, whatever your goggle fashion is,
keeping your head covered and hair pulled back,
because the powder will cling to your hair.
And if you do come in contact with tear gas again,
get away from the area, remove your clothing,
wash everything as soon as possible.
Wash yourself off as soon as possible is the best thing to do.
Hey, you should do that anyway, because you're going into public.
So hey, it's a win.
Yes, washing your hands and your whole body is going to be important anyway.
I've seen a lot of people ask about the spray bottles of baking soda and water.
I guess those have been used a lot in Hong Kong and so protesters there were recommending that they be used. I couldn't find a lot of good evidence that that's very helpful
as much as just getting out of the area stripping down and washing off.
When it comes to pepper spray or mace, a lot of people are asking if milk is helpful
that like if you get if you get it in your eyes or on your face to dump milk, milk will provide some temporary relief,
but it actually does not clear the agent. Much like drinking milk after you eat a spicy pepper,
something with capsaicin in it. It doesn't permanently do anything. So your better bet is to have some like
baby soap, baby shampoo, that kind of stuff, some really gentle soap, diluted and like
wash yourself off as fast as possible.
That's the better thing.
Blink vigorously.
Try not to rub your face or eyes or anything like that.
Don't rub anything, don't touch anything, but washing with some sort of gentle soap like
that is probably the best thing you can do. And I think those are all
the big.
If you can't protest, you're unable to. I know I've seen a lot of people who are, this
would be especially susceptible to COVID that are unable to join protests, etc., etc.
Remember, you can donate to people who are protesting their groups standing
by to help bail people out when if they are arrested. One I know I thought my head bail
project.org is one that works in a lot of different cities but it's a great way to show
your support as well. I hope if you were able. Yeah, and one thing I would say is if you do it in the protests,
I would consider, I would assume that you have likely been exposed
to, especially if you've been in one of these big protests
in these larger cities, you may well have been exposed
while you're at the protest to coronavirus.
And I would really consider trying to isolate as much as you can following your,
your time at the protest as much as you can stay away from vulnerable people,
the elderly or those with underlying illnesses that might make them more susceptible
to the severe forms of COVID, that is probably a good decision that you could make.
And the only other thing is, again,
as a white person and as other white people listening
to the show, listening is the number one thing we can do.
It's not bad to ask questions, but, and I've heard a lot of people say Instead, it's not bad to ask questions,
but, and I've heard a lot of people say this,
if you're going to ask questions,
why don't you do some work first?
There are lots of resources out there
that you can find to answer your questions
about how to not just be not racist,
but be anti-racist,
and to actually ally with our black family and friends
and actually help with this problem, and not just ask them to do the emotional
labor of explaining to you what you can do. We tried to help with this. So this maybe made it easier
on you. We did some of the labor for you this time.
We, we, it's in need of all the, the, the searching and what have you.
We've delivered this to you.
Uh, and you can do your own research too.
Yes. And I would, I would, you know, again, I, I felt like we have a platform.
We should use it.
But right now the primary thing as a white American I need to do is listen.
And if you are looking for resources, I would seek black voices.
They are the leaders of this movement because they should be speaking and we should be listening.
And we should be right there using our privilege and our position in society to stand with them,
to defend them, to support them,
and to send the message that Black Lives Matter.
And we are also sick of this, we are also tired of this,
and we are willing to do whatever we can
to stop these racial disparities,
this racial violence and the killing
of Black people in this country.
Thank you so much, listening to our podcast,
solbons, thanks to the taxpayers for these sort of
some medicines as the intra-nautrable program.
And thank you to you for being here with us.
We very much appreciate it and we hope to be back with you again
next week.
But until then, my name is Justin McRoy.
I'm Sydney McRoy.
And as always, don't drill a hole in your head. Alright!
Maximumfun.org.
Comedy and Culture.
Artistone.
Audience Supported.
Hi, I'm James Host of Minority Corner, which is a podcast that's all about intersectionality
that's hosted by James with a guest host every week.
Discussing all sorts of wonderful issues, nerdy and political.
Pop culture. Black queer feminism, race, sexuality, news,
you're gonna learn your history, their self-empowerment,
and it's told by what feels like your best friend.
Why should someone listen to minority corner?
Why not?
Oh my god, free stuff.
There's not free stuff.
The listeners of minority corner will enjoy some necessary
LOLs, but mainly a look at what's happening in our
world through a colorful lens. People will get the perspective of marginalized communities.
I feel heard, I feel seen. Like you said, you need to understand how to be more proactive in your
community and this is a great way to get started. Join us every Friday on Max Fun or wherever you
get your podcast. My Nordic Corner because together with majority.
because together we're the majority.