Pharmacist Julie Finnigan prepares a dose of the Covid vaccine at a clinic run by the University of Vermont Medical Center at the Champlain Valley Expo in Essex. Courtesy UVM Medical Center

The Vermont Conversation with David Goodman is a VTDigger podcast that features in-depth interviews on local and national issues with politicians, activists, artists, changemakers and citizens who are making a difference. Listen below, and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or Spotify to hear more.

A striking feature of the Covid-19 pandemic is the disparities in who contracts the disease, who dies from it, and now, who gets vaccinated. Around the country, white people are getting vaccinated at higher rates than people of color. In Mississippi, Black people have received 15% of the Covid vaccinations, but they account for 38% of coronavirus cases and 42% of deaths in the state. This disparity is also evident in Vermont: 9.1% of white Vermonters have received the vaccine, 7.3% of Hispanic Vermonters, 6.6% of Asian Vermonters and 6.1% of Black Vermonters — and only 1.9% of Native American Vermonters. 

Natalia Linos has argued that prioritizing vaccines based on age “risks building in inequities by race and ethnicity.” Linos is a social epidemiologist and executive director at Harvard’s FXB Center for Health and Human Rights. She has worked internationally with the U.N. Development Programme and as a scientific adviser in the commissioner’s office at the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. In 2020, Linos took her advocacy into a new arena: She ran unsuccessfully for Congress in Massachusetts to replace outgoing Rep. Joe Kennedy. On this Vermont Conversation, Linos discusses Covid-19 disparities and why she believes science should play a larger role in politics.

Twitter: @davidgoodmanvt. David Goodman is an award-winning journalist and the author of a dozen books, including four New York Times bestsellers that he co-authored with his sister, Democracy Now! host...