By Stacy M. Brown
NNPA Senior National
Correspondent
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is in upheaval, and the consequences are falling hardest on Black Americans.
President Donald Trump fired CDC Director Dr. Susan Monarez less than a month after her Senate confirmation. Monarez, a microbiologist and epidemiologist, was removed after refusing to sign off on directives pushed by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that her lawyers called “reckless and unscientific”.
Her dismissal triggered mass resignations from senior leaders, including Dr. Debra Houry, the agency’s Chief Science and Medical Officer; Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, head of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases; Dr. Daniel Jernigan, director of the National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases; and Dr. Jennifer Layden, director of Public Health Data and Technology. These departures stripped the CDC of experts who had focused on closing health gaps that weigh heavily on Black communities, including programs to address HIV, chronic disease, and environmental safety.
The fallout has been swift. At least 600 employees were permanently laid off, with divisions on violence prevention and HIV/STD awareness gutted. Black Americans are already diagnosed with HIV at seven times the rate of whites, raising fears that gains in prevention will collapse without federal support. The changes extend to funding. Hundreds of millions of dollars in CDC grants to state and local health departments have been canceled.
States with some of the nation’s largest Black populations — including Georgia and Texas — stand to lose critical resources for disease prevention, immunization clinics, and public health jobs. Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens warned earlier this year that cuts at the CDC jeopardize “health, national security, community wellness, jobs in Atlanta, and faith in our day-to-day.” The man now in charge of the CDC is Jim O’Neill, a venture capitalist with no medical background. O’Neill has previously argued that drug companies should not be required to prove a drug’s effectiveness before selling it to the public. Public health experts fear his appointment signals a shift away from science-based decision-making at the nation’s top health agency.
Black health leaders stress that communities must act quickly. Analysts point to alternative resources like the Vaccine Integrity Project, a university-led initiative providing independent vaccine data, and Violence Prevention Solutions, which consults with local organizations after federal cutbacks. Experts also call for state and local governments to expand their own health efforts, filling the void left by the CDC. The Center for Black Health & Equity said in a recent statement that the cuts “jeopardize foundational services” and urged Black Americans to push for accountability, transparency, and sustained funding at every level.
“We are worried about the wide-ranging impact that all these decisions will have on America’s health security,” a conglomerate of nine former CDC directors, who served under both Republican and Democratic administrations, warned in a statement. “Rural communities and vulnerable populations will be most at risk.”
Real estate fraud is on the rise, with over 9,500 complaints last year alone, leading to losses of more than $145 million! Unfortunately, it often goes unnoticed until it’s too late, putting your home and assets at risk.
Justin Phillips discusses his journey in landing roles on the national stage to what it’s like being a Standby in the New York Times Critics’ Pick Broadway Dallas musical, “Come From Away.”
In this video we take a look at the rising demand for STEM studies in the Dallas area. The Dallas Independent School District is placing a high amount of focus on this growing field…
U.S. Representative Jasmine Crockett sat down with NNPA in the midst of all the excitement at the Democratic National Convention.
Rachel Simone Webb is taking the stage by storm as she plays the lead role, Juliet, in “& Juliet,” a play written by Emmy-winning (Schitt’s Creek) David West Read, including music from Grammy award-winning songwriter, Max Martin.
2019 Tony Award ® and 2020 Grammy Award ® winning musical, Hadestown is making its stop at Dallas’ Music Hall at Fair Park as part of the 2024-2025 Broadway Dallas series! Jaylon C. Crump spoke with Backstage Chatter about their role as Hermes, the messenger god in this upcoming Broadway Dallas show.
ALABAMA
ARIZONA
CALIFORNIA
COLORADO
CONNECTICUT
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
FLORIDA
GEORGIA
ILLINOIS
INDIANA
KENTUCKY
LOUISIANA
MARYLAND
MICHIGAN
MINNESOTA
MISSISSIPPI
MISSOURI
NEBRASKA
NEW JERSEY
NEW YORK
NORTH CAROLINA
OHIO
OKLAHOMA
OREGON
PENNSYLVANIA
SOUTH CAROLINA
TENNESSEE
TEXAS
VIRGINIA
WASHINGTON
WISCONSIN
© North Dallas Gazette © 2009 – 2025
Trump’s Overhaul of CDC Puts Black Health at Greatest Risk – North Dallas Gazette







More Stories
Vince Staples’ Comment About How Black Folks Would’ve Dressed For Jan. 6 Insurrection is Deeper Than You Think – The Root
Black Chicagoans embrace the quarter-zip trend while discussing its meaning – Chicago Sun-Times
As The ‘Quarter Zip’ Gains Popularity, Chicagoans Debate Trend’s Impact On Black Men – Black Enterprise