đ©ș PULSE CHECK: Why Black Health Needs Its Own Conversation
Black Health Weekly
Vision Newspaperâs new Monday column tackles the health challengesâand the healing journeysâof Black communities around the world.
Health is personal, but itâs also political. In Black communities around the globeâwhether in Jamaica, Toronto, Brooklyn, London, or Lagosâthe gap in health outcomes is undeniable. From higher rates of hypertension and diabetes to alarming disparities in maternal mortality and mental health access, Black people continue to face disproportionate health risks. Yet the conversations about our bodies, our wellness, and our healing are often sidelined or misunderstood.
Today, Vision Newspaper launches âPulse Check: Black Health Weeklyââa new weekly editorial series committed to elevating Black health conversations with the urgency, nuance, and care they deserve.
The Numbers Donât Lie
In Canada, Black women are nearly twice as likely to die during childbirth compared to their white counterparts. In the U.S., Black men have the lowest life expectancy of any racial group. In the Caribbean, non-communicable diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, and stroke continue to be among the leading causes of deathâmany of which are preventable or manageable with early intervention and education.
But these statistics only scratch the surface.
The lived experiences behind the dataâlong wait times, cultural misdiagnoses, lack of representation in clinical research, and medical racismâare part of a deeper issue: a health system that was never designed with Black lives in mind.
From Surviving to Thriving
âPulse Checkâ will not only report on the crisesâweâll also celebrate the cures. From community health clinics in Kingston to wellness movements led by Black nutritionists and doulas in Toronto and Atlanta, weâll spotlight the changemakers reshaping what Black wellness looks like.
Each week, this column will:
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Dive into a key health issue affecting Black communities
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Highlight a cultural perspective on wellness
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Feature voices from the front linesâpatients, doctors, healers, and advocates
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Provide links to resources, screenings, or community health events
Because being healthy isnât just about beating illness. Itâs about reclaiming joy, practicing rest, restoring balance, and building systems of care that are rooted in our histories and respectful of our realities.
Whatâs Ahead
In the weeks ahead, Pulse Check will explore:
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Black maternal health in the Caribbean
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The mental health crisis among Black youth
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How food deserts are fueling chronic disease in Black communities
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Reclaiming African and Caribbean herbal medicine traditions
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Why representation in healthcare mattersâfrom med school to the clinic
This series is about truth-telling, healing, and accountability. Itâs about meeting at the intersection of health and justiceâand staying there until change happens.
đWe start here. Every Monday. This is your Pulse Check.
đŁ Pulse Check: Black Health Weekly is Vision Newspaperâs weekly column on health, healing, and equity in Black communities across the Caribbean, Canada, the U.S., Africa and beyond.
Follow us @VisionNewspaper for next weekâs feature on Black maternal health. #PulseCheck #BlackHealth #VisionNewspaper