Unidos for Hope

Unidos for Hope

501 (c) (3) DC, MD, NORTHERN VA based nonprofit dedicated to empowering underserved communities through fundraising initiatives centered on pupusas. Featured on this podcast is our essay series in audio form: Systems of Survival: A Nine-Part Exploration on Justice, Health, and Community.

Episodes

  1. May 26

    Episode 5: Systems of Survival: Holistic Health Has Limits: Why Vaccines Still Matter

    Jessica Vasquez-Luna's "Systems of Survival" series examines how the pandemic exposed long-standing inequalities in health, labor, and policy. Each essay traces how race, class, and geography shaped vulnerability—from frontline workers and overcrowded housing to medical mistrust and systemic neglect. It also explores resilience through community-led responses, the ongoing impact of long COVID-19, and the intersection of holistic and institutional medical care.Holistic health treats the body as a whole, whereas modern medicine targets specific diseases with evidence-based tools. Holistic health promotes well-being and cultural connection, but cannot alone halt widespread virus transmission. It has become more popular in marginalised communities due to the exclusion and discrimination present in formal healthcare systems. Similarly, vaccine hesitancy is often linked to mistrust caused by racism, bias, and past harm in healthcare settings. Many people are drawn to holistic healthcare as it feels safer, more accessible and culturally grounded. Instead, it is public health tools like masking, vaccines, ventilation, and coordinated policies that protect our populations. Despite the effectiveness of clinical healthcare, its accessibility and distribution isn’t always fair. Wealthier and politically powerful groups gained faster access to vaccines and healthcare resources, in comparison to vulnerable groups such as essential workers, undocumented immigrants, disabled people and unhoused populations. At the end of the day, holistic healthcare and modern medicine are both important, but they serve different purposes.

    14 min
  2. May 5

    Episode 3: Systems of Survival: When Public Health Forgets the Margins: Animals, Disease & Inequality

    Jessica Vasquez-Luna's "Systems of Survival" series examines how the pandemic exposed long-standing inequalities in health, labor, and policy. Each essay traces how race, class, and geography shaped vulnerability—from frontline workers and overcrowded housing to medical mistrust and systemic neglect. It also explores resilience through community-led responses, the ongoing impact of long COVID-19, and the intersection of holistic and institutional medical care. The third episode, “When Public Health Forgets the Margins: Animals, Disease and Inequality” highlights how zoonotic diseases exacerbate environmental disruption and structural inequality. A virus will move through ecosystems through animals, environments and communities who cary the weight of structural inequality. In our populations, we can see how human-animal interactions shape disease risk long before an outbreak occurs. While COVID-19 highlighted zoonotic disease globally, many communities have lived with this reality for decades. Zoonoses disproportionately affect low-income areas, where close contact between humans, livestock, and wildlife, coupled with inadequate infrastructure and sanitation, is common. Zoonoses are frequently underreported in low- and middle-income countries. Individuals who depend on animals for their livelihoods face heightened exposure and have limited access to support and resources. Climate change and alterations in land use are driving wildlife into closer proximity with human populations, thereby increasing the risk of viral transmission between species. Consequently, underserved communities are often unfairly blamed for "unsafe practices" instead of acknowledging the systemic factors at play.

    9 min
  3. Apr 28

    Episode 2: Systems of Survival: COVID-19's Lasting Global Impact

    SYSTEMS OF SURVIVAL: SERIES 1: Pandemic, Public Health & Structural InequalityARTICLE 2: COVID-19's Lasting Global FootprintJessica Vasquez-Luna's "Systems of Survival" series examines how the pandemic exposed long-standing inequalities in health, labor, and policy. Each essay traces how race, class, and geography shaped vulnerability—from frontline workers and overcrowded housing to medical mistrust and systemic neglect. It also explores resilience through community-led responses, the ongoing impact of long COVID-19, and the intersection of holistic and institutional medical care.The second article expands on themes discussed in the podcast, exploring how COVID-19 continues to shape labor markets, public trust, global health systems, and the emotional landscape of entire generations. It examines how COVID-19’s prolonged impact reveals who is protected, who is vulnerable, and what it means to build something better. The concept of "post-pandemic life" is misleading, as illness, disability, and long COVID have pushed many out of work, notably in the labor industry. Healthcare workers face burnout, trauma, and ongoing pressure from staffing shortages. Declining public trust in scientists and health institutions is most pronounced among groups with historical reasons for mistrust. The pandemic has accentuated institutional fractures, especially between high-income and low-income countries, due to unequal access to vaccines and treatments, causing prolonged outbreaks, preventable deaths, and disruptions to education and healthcare. Mental health effects from increased anxiety, depression, and suicidal ideation during the pandemic have persisted, representing a generational shift.Read article on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/covid-19s-lasting-global-footprint-pupusas-unidosforhope-kxpve/Master Doc (links to all articles in series): https://docs.google.com/document/d/1uf04kRSnTrPJrZx4H66vsuRsF9AbLD979_8CaX9_UeM/edit?usp=sharing⁠Writing and narration by Jessica Vasquez-LunaAnimation and illustration by Elina KautzCONNECT WITH US ON SOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/unidosforhopenonprofit?igsh=ZG1xMWhtdjI5aGdz Facebook: https://facebook.com/unidosforhope LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pupusas-unidosforhope/ Spotify: https://tr.ee/wldNLLFYqq Apple Podcasts: https://tr.ee/i7w8ptWlaT

    12 min
  4. Episode 1: Systems of Survival: COVID-19 and the Disproportionate Effects on Underserved Communities

    Apr 21

    Episode 1: Systems of Survival: COVID-19 and the Disproportionate Effects on Underserved Communities

    SYSTEMS OF SURVIVAL: SERIES 1: Pandemic, Public Health & Structural Inequality ARTICLE 1: COVID-19 and the Disproportionate Effects on Underserved Communities Jessica Vasquez-Luna's "Systems of Survival" series examines how the pandemic exposed long-standing inequalities in health, labor, and policy. Each essay traces how race, class, and geography shaped vulnerability—from frontline workers and overcrowded housing to medical mistrust and systemic neglect. It also explores resilience through community-led responses, the ongoing impact of long COVID-19, and the intersection of holistic and institutional medical care. The first article, “COVID-19 and the Disproportionate Effects on Underserved Communities,” discusses how the pandemic exacerbated existing social divides along lines of race, income, immigration status, and location, disproportionately affecting vulnerable populations. The unequal impact was not random: Black, Latino, and Indigenous communities experienced significantly worse outcomes, with disparities that persist even after accounting for age—reflecting long-standing structural inequality. Recognizing and addressing these entrenched disparities remains essential for building a more equitable public health landscape. Read article on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/copy-covid-19-inequality-made-visible-pupusas-unidosforhope-xxnme/ Master Doc: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1uf04kRSnTrPJrZx4H66vsuRsF9AbLD979_8CaX9_UeM/edit?usp=sharing CONNECT WITH US ON SOCIAL MEDIA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/unidosforhopenonprofit Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/people/Unidos-Hope/61586509115271/?mibextid=wwXIfr&rdid=i8JgtpuB8jPyXqBk&share_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fshare%2F1BbWcKCtGj%2F%3Fmibextid%3DwwXIfr LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pupusas-unidosforhope

    9 min

About

501 (c) (3) DC, MD, NORTHERN VA based nonprofit dedicated to empowering underserved communities through fundraising initiatives centered on pupusas. Featured on this podcast is our essay series in audio form: Systems of Survival: A Nine-Part Exploration on Justice, Health, and Community.