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大流行的脆弱性:COVID-19 正在暴露和加剧美国心脏地带的不平等现象。

Pandemic precarity: COVID-19 is exposing and exacerbating inequalities in the American heartland.

机构信息

Department of Sociology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405.

Department of Sociology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405

出版信息

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Feb 23;118(8). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2020685118.

Abstract

Crises lay bare the social fault lines of society. In the United States, race, gender, age, and education have affected vulnerability to COVID-19 infection. Yet, consequences likely extend far beyond morbidity and mortality. Temporarily closing the economy sent shock waves through communities, raising the possibility that social inequities, preexisting and current, have weakened economic resiliency and reinforced disadvantage, especially among groups most devastated by the Great Recession. We address pandemic precarity, or risk for material and financial insecurity, in Indiana, where manufacturing loss is high, metro areas ranked among the hardest hit by the Great Recession nationally, and health indicators stand in the bottom quintile. Using longitudinal data ( = 994) from the Person to Person Health Interview Study, fielded in 2019-2020 and again during Indiana's initial stay-at-home order, we provide a representative, probability-based assessment of adverse economic outcomes of the pandemic. Survey-weighted multivariate regressions, controlling for preexisting inequality, find Black adults over 3 times as likely as Whites to report food insecurity, being laid off, or being unemployed. Residents without a college degree are twice as likely to report food insecurity (compared to some college), while those not completing high school (compared to bachelor's degree) are 4 times as likely to do so. Younger adults and women were also more likely to report economic hardships. Together, the results support contentions of a Matthew Effect, where pandemic precarity disproportionately affects historically disadvantaged groups, widening inequality. Strategically deployed relief efforts and longer-term policy reforms are needed to challenge the perennial and unequal impact of disasters.

摘要

危机揭示了社会的社会断层线。在美国,种族、性别、年龄和受教育程度影响了 COVID-19 感染的易感性。然而,后果可能远远超出发病率和死亡率。暂时关闭经济使社区受到冲击,有可能使先前和当前存在的社会不平等削弱了经济弹性并加剧了劣势,尤其是在那些受大衰退打击最严重的群体中。我们在印第安纳州解决了大流行的脆弱性,即物质和财务不安全的风险,该州制造业损失高,大都市区在全国范围内受到大衰退的打击最为严重,健康指标处于倒数五分之一。使用来自人际健康访谈研究(Person to Person Health Interview Study)的纵向数据(n=994),该研究于 2019-2020 年进行,并在印第安纳州首次居家令期间再次进行,我们对大流行的不利经济后果进行了代表性的、基于概率的评估。经过调查加权的多元回归,控制了先前存在的不平等,发现黑人成年人报告食物不安全、被解雇或失业的可能性是白人的三倍多。没有大学学历的居民报告食物不安全的可能性是(与一些大学相比)的两倍,而未完成高中学业的居民(与学士学位相比)报告食物不安全的可能性是四倍。年轻成年人和女性也更有可能报告经济困难。总的来说,这些结果支持了马太效应的论点,即大流行的脆弱性不成比例地影响了历史上处于不利地位的群体,扩大了不平等。需要有策略地部署救济工作和长期政策改革,以应对灾害的长期和不平等影响。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2a11/7923675/49f7ae4e1944/pnas.2020685118fig01.jpg

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