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L.A. County Department of Mental Health fights coronavirus discrimination

by City News Service • February 19, 2020

LOS ANGELES – Worried about discrimination borne of fear over the coronavirus and targeting Chinese and other Asian Americans, L.A. County mental health officials have ramped up outreach and services to affected communities.

Supervisor Janice Hahn said residents in Asian Pacific Islander communities are being harassed for something as simple as wearing a medical mask.

“The coronavirus outbreak is happening on the other side of the globe, but residents here in L.A. County are experiencing discrimination, harassment, bullying and fear because of it,” Hahn said.

“L.A. County is making mental health services and information available that I hope will decrease some of this fear and anxiety and give impacted communities the support they need to get through this difficult time,” Hahn added.

Despite only one confirmed case of the virus in Los Angeles County, misinformation has fueled anxiety and some xenophobia, Hahn said. She raised concerns that eventually people with symptoms might not come forward out of fear of being shunned or attacked by other residents.

Department of Mental Health Director Dr. Jonathan Sherin provided an update on the agency’s efforts.

“This type of situation really challenges us … as a community,” Sherin said.

DMH and the Department of Public Health are coordinating to provide information at community meetings and through media and social media platforms and are also distributing a guide for coping with stress related to an infectious disease outbreak.

Crisis teams will be available as needed for residents and healthcare workers stigmatized due to the virus, as well as those who may have lost family members, according to Sherin’s update to the board.

DPH Director Barbara Ferrer assured the board that a public health nurse has been assigned to every returning traveler with potential exposure to the virus, and reminded residents that any quarantine need only last for two weeks.

“The incubation period is, at its longest, 14 days,” Ferrer said.

In addition to concerns about discrimination, residents are worried about extended family in China.

“The separation issues are way bigger than we have acknowledged,” Ferrer told the board.

Foreign nationals are no longer allowed to enter the U.S. if they have traveled to or live in China, keeping some families apart from loved ones with little information.

More than 75,000 cases are confirmed worldwide and more than 2,000 people have died. There are 29 cases in the U.S. — including 14 people flown back from a quarantined cruise ship — and eight in California.

No one in the U.S. has died as a result of the virus, however, one American died at a hospital in Wuhan, the epicenter of the disease in China.

The Department of Mental Health’s 24/7 hotline can be reached at 800- 854-7771.

–

Filed Under: Health, Home, Los Angeles County, Politics

4 comments for "L.A. County Department of Mental Health fights coronavirus discrimination"

  1. Trumpist#1 says

    February 20, 2020 at 2:40 pm

    A potential deadly worldwide pandemic threatening us, and LA’s ruling communists are worried about offending someone’s feelings. Typical and pathetic abdication of public responsibility.

    Or to paraphrase Surfside 6’s eloquent comment: “Go ahead snowflakes, ban something”.

    • Alexis says

      February 20, 2020 at 3:45 pm

      Don’t be fearful of the coronavirus; more people die of the flu. Anyway, maybe people might give some thought to the California (CalPERS) pension fund investing in Chinese blacklisted companies.

  2. John says

    February 19, 2020 at 11:19 pm

    I wear a medical face mask when in busy public places like Costco and emergency rooms during the cold and flu season, not because of the coronavirus. I am protecting myself from the cold and flu virus. Have done this for years because, not just children, grown adults do not cover their mouth when they couch or sneeze and people do not know how to wash their hands properly. I work with elderly patients with COPD and passing the cold or flu virus could cause upper respiratory tract infections in these patients.

  3. Corona says

    February 19, 2020 at 9:09 pm

    “More than 75,000 cases are confirmed worldwide and more than 2,000 people have died.”

    The real numbers are likely two to three times higher.

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