Rapid response is synonymous with moments of crisis. From first responders to communication experts, responding quickly to a crisis is critical for community health and well-being. But what about rapid response research?
COVID-19 has epitomized a complex crisis of infectious disease, food and housing insecurity, and mental distress. People who are Black, Latinx, Native American, and living in low-income households are the most vulnerable to these conditions. It is clear that health and social policies enacted during the pandemic will affect communities for decades to come.
To inform rapid response research and policymaking, my team at Boston University and I developed the COVID-19 U.S. State Policy database—also known as CUSP—in 2020. This resource aims to inform health and social policy decisions that promote health equity and focuses on policies that affect vulnerable and historically excluded populations. Now over a year after its inception, we are assessing what we have learned and where we have yet to go.
How It Started
States responded to the pandemic with a wide range of polices, from stay-at-home orders and closing businesses, to unemployment insurance and minimum wage changes. Many of these policies were aligned with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s (RWJF) health equity principles for recovery during the pandemic. With support from RWJF's Evidence to Action program, we started the CUSP database.
As we saw the pandemic exacerbate disparities stemming from structural racism and inequitable policies, we wanted to document policies so researchers could evaluate their impacts on populations most affected by COVID-19 and its repercussions.
While Black and Latinx people were more likely than White people to die of COVID-19, in the database we captured some policy decisions that explicitly disadvantaged Black and Latinx people. For instance, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended prioritizing essential workers for vaccines, and most states planned to do so. But after a federal government recommendation to prioritize people aged 65 and older, most states shifted to age-based vaccine priorities. While 21 percent of the White population is older than 65, just 12 percent of Black people and 8 percent of Latinx people are over 65. Age prioritization is then, by design, saying Black and Latinx will be less likely to get the vaccine.
Tracking multiple social policies at once also revealed a pattern of exclusion. CUSP captured how state minimum wage policies systematically excluded some people such as tipped workers. These workers are predominantly Black, Latinx and Native American. We saw a similar pattern with unemployment insurance; without federal intervention through congressional action, many people may be excluded from unemployment insurance because they earn too little to qualify or because they are independent contractors. The same pattern of exclusion emerged with paid sick leave; even in states with paid sick leave, the policy typically only applies to full-time workers and excludes contract or gig workers.