Occupational Therapy News July 2020 | Page 18

FEATURE EQUALITY AND DIVERSITY Tackling structural inequalities one conversation at a time Musharrat J Ahmed-Landeryou was recently invited to speak on the OT and Chill podcast ‘L.O.V.E – Let’s talk about race #BlackLivesMatter’. Here she urges everyone to engage in difficult conversations about race to make change happen Every time the deaths of black people when in the hands of or in the care of authority is publicised, it is a wound that scars deeply, mentally and emotionally. Every time a death happens, you are reminded of the scars, and another scar is added. I am angry and upset out of fear and frustration that yet again there will be no action and this will result in another inquiry. In fact, as I write this, the Prime Minister has asked for one into the health inequalities for the Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) population. Examples of reviews and recommendations include: • the Grenfell Review (www.gov.uk/government/ publications/independent-review-of-buildingregulations-and-fire-safety-final-report): council flats have still not had dangerous cladding removed, or sprinklers placed, or clear evacuation plans put in place, and most of the evacuees are still in temporary accommodation; • the Macpherson Report (www.gov.uk/government/ publications/the-stephen-lawrence-inquiry): 20 years after Stephen Lawrence’s murder, the recommendations for training when policing BAME areas, or BAME leadership representation, or BAME recruitment have not been adequately dealt with, so institutional racism, discrimination and prejudice continues; • the Lammy Review (2017) into the treatment of and outcomes for BAME individuals in the Criminal Justice System (www.gov.uk/government/publications/ lammy-review-final-report): no action has been visibly taken on the seriousness of the overrepresentation of BAME people in the criminal justice system, the endemic racial bias throughout the justice system, or the recommendations regarding training and building community trust and dealing with unconscious bias; and • the Windrush Lessons Learned Review, by Wendy Williams (www.gov.uk/government/publications/ © GettyImages/RyanJLane 18 OTnews July 2020