Suppr超能文献

COVID-19 与不平等:对纽约市和芝加哥热点地区的比较空间分析。

COVID-19 and Inequity: a Comparative Spatial Analysis of New York City and Chicago Hot Spots.

机构信息

City University of New York Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, New York, NY, USA.

CUNY Institute for Implementation Science in Population Health, New York, NY, USA.

出版信息

J Urban Health. 2020 Aug;97(4):461-470. doi: 10.1007/s11524-020-00468-0.

Abstract

There have been numerous reports that the impact of the ongoing COVID-19 epidemic has disproportionately impacted traditionally vulnerable communities associated with neighborhood attributes, such as the proportion of racial and ethnic minorities, migrants, and the lower income households. The goal of this ecological cross-sectional study is to examine the demographic and economic nature of spatial hot and cold spots of SARS-CoV-2 rates in New York City and Chicago as of April 13, 2020 using data from the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Illinois Department of Public Health, and the American Community Survey. In both cities, cold spots (clusters of low SARS-CoV-2 rate ZIP code tabulation areas as identified by the Getis-Ord (GI*) statistic) demonstrated social determinants of health characteristics typically associated with better health outcomes and the ability to maintain physical distance ("social distancing"). These neighborhoods tended to be wealthier, have higher educational attainment, higher proportions of non-Hispanic white residents, and more workers in managerial occupations (all p values < 0.01 using Wilcoxon two-sample test). Hot spots (clusters of high SARS-CoV-2 rate ZIP code tabulation areas) had similarities as well, such as lower rates of college graduates and higher proportions of people of color. It also appears that household size (more people per household), rather than overall population density (people per square mile), is more strongly associated with hot spots. New York City had an average of 3.0 people per household in hot spots and 2.1 in cold spots (p < 0.01), and Chicago had 2.8 people per household in hot spots and 2.0 in cold spots (p = 0.03). However, hotspots were located in neighborhoods that were significantly less dense (New York City: 22,900 people per square mile in hot spots and 68,900 in cold spots (p < 0.01); Chicago: 10,000 people per square mile in hot spots and 23,400 in cold spots (p = 0.03)). Findings suggest important differences between the cities' hot spots as well. NYC hot spots can be described as working-class and middle-income communities, perhaps indicative of greater concentrations of service workers and other occupations (including those classified as "essential services" during the pandemic) that may not require a college degree but pay wages above poverty levels. Chicago's hot spot neighborhoods, on the other hand, are among the city's most vulnerable, low-income neighborhoods with extremely high rates of poverty, unemployment, and non-Hispanic Black residents.

摘要

有大量报告表明,持续的 COVID-19 疫情对与邻里属性相关的传统弱势群体社区造成了不成比例的影响,例如少数族裔和少数民族、移民以及低收入家庭的比例。本生态横断面研究的目的是使用纽约市卫生局、伊利诺伊州公共卫生部和美国社区调查的数据,检查截至 2020 年 4 月 13 日纽约市和芝加哥的 SARS-CoV-2 率的空间热点和冷点的人口统计学和经济性质。在这两个城市中,冷点(由 Getis-Ord(GI*)统计确定的 SARS-CoV-2 率较低的邮政编码区的聚类)表现出与更好的健康结果和保持身体距离(“社交距离”)相关的健康决定因素特征。这些社区往往更富裕、教育程度更高、非西班牙裔白人居民比例更高,以及从事管理职业的工人比例更高(所有 p 值<0.01,采用 Wilcoxon 两样本检验)。热点(SARS-CoV-2 率较高的邮政编码区聚类)也有相似之处,例如大学毕业生比例较低,有色人种比例较高。似乎家庭规模(每个家庭的人数)而不是总人口密度(每平方英里的人数)与热点更密切相关。纽约市热点地区的平均家庭人数为 3.0 人,冷点地区为 2.1 人(p<0.01),芝加哥热点地区为 2.8 人,冷点地区为 2.0 人(p=0.03)。然而,热点地区位于人口密度明显较低的社区(纽约市:热点地区每平方英里 22900 人,冷点地区每平方英里 68900 人(p<0.01);芝加哥:热点地区每平方英里 10000 人,冷点地区每平方英里 23400 人(p=0.03))。研究结果表明,这两个城市的热点地区之间存在重要差异。纽约市的热点地区可以被描述为工人阶级和中产阶级社区,这可能表明服务行业和其他职业(包括在大流行期间被归类为“基本服务”的职业)的从业人员更为集中,这些职业可能不需要大学学位,但工资高于贫困线。另一方面,芝加哥的热点地区是该市最脆弱、低收入的社区之一,贫困率、失业率和非西班牙裔黑人居民比例极高。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c952/7392957/5499044dcdd3/11524_2020_468_Fig1_HTML.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验