Am J Epidemiol. 2021 Aug 1;190(8):1439-1446. doi: 10.1093/aje/kwab059.
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is disproportionately burdening racial and ethnic minority groups in the United States. Higher risks of infection and mortality among racialized minorities are a consequence of structural racism, reflected in specific policies that date back centuries and persist today. Yet our surveillance activities do not reflect what we know about how racism structures risk. When measuring racial and ethnic disparities in deaths due to COVID-19, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistically accounts for the geographic distribution of deaths throughout the United States to reflect the fact that deaths are concentrated in areas with different racial and ethnic distributions from those of the larger United States. In this commentary, we argue that such an approach misses an important driver of disparities in COVID-19 mortality, namely the historical forces that determine where individuals live, work, and play, and that consequently determine their risk of dying from COVID-19. We explain why controlling for geography downplays the disproportionate burden of COVID-19 on racialized minority groups in the United States. Finally, we offer recommendations for the analysis of surveillance data to estimate racial disparities, including shifting from distribution-based to risk-based measures, to help inform a more effective and equitable public health response to the pandemic.
2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)在美国不成比例地给种族和族裔少数群体带来负担。感染和死亡风险在少数族裔中更高,这是结构性种族主义的结果,体现在几个世纪以来一直存在并延续至今的具体政策中。然而,我们的监测活动并没有反映出我们对种族如何构建风险的了解。在衡量 COVID-19 死亡的种族和族裔差异时,疾病控制与预防中心(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)从统计学上考虑了美国各地死亡的地理分布,以反映这样一个事实,即死亡集中在与美国更大范围的种族和族裔分布不同的地区。在这篇评论中,我们认为,这种方法忽略了 COVID-19 死亡率差异的一个重要驱动因素,即决定个人生活、工作和娱乐地点的历史力量,而这些地点又决定了他们死于 COVID-19 的风险。我们解释了为什么控制地理位置会淡化 COVID-19 对美国少数族裔群体不成比例的负担。最后,我们为分析监测数据以估计种族差异提出了建议,包括从基于分布的措施转向基于风险的措施,以帮助为大流行提供更有效和公平的公共卫生应对措施提供信息。