Population Health Sciences Department, Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2021 Jun;36(6):1696-1701. doi: 10.1007/s11606-021-06699-4. Epub 2021 Apr 5.
Inequities in COVID-19 outcomes in the USA have been clearly documented for sex and race: men are dying at higher rates than women, and Black individuals are dying at higher rates than white individuals. Unexplored, however, is how sex and race interact in COVID-19 outcomes.
Use available data to characterize COVID-19 mortality rates within and between race and sex strata in two US states, with the aim of understanding how apparent sex disparities in COVID-19 deaths vary across race.
This observational study uses COVID-19 mortality data through September 21, 2020, from Georgia (GA) and Michigan (MI).
We calculate age-specific rates for each sex-race-age stratum, and age-standardized rates for each race-sex stratum. We investigate the sex disparity within race groups and the race disparity within sex groups using age-standardized rate ratios, and rate differences.
Within race groups, men have a higher COVID-19 mortality rate than women. Black men have the highest rate of all race-sex groups (in MI: 254.6, deaths per 100,000, 95% CI: 241.1-268.2, in GA:128.5, 95% CI: 121.0-135.9). In MI, the COVID-19 mortality rate for Black women (147.1, 95% CI: 138.7-155.4) is higher than the rate for white men (39.1, 95% CI: 37.3-40.9), white women (29.7, 95% CI: 28.3-31.0), and Asian/Pacific Islander men and women. COVID-19 mortality rates in GA followed the same pattern. In MI, the male:female mortality rate ratio among Black individuals is 1.7 (1.5-2.0) while the rate ratio among White individuals is only 1.3 (1.2-1.5).
While overall, men have higher COVID-19 mortality rates than women, our findings show that this sex disparity does not hold across racial groups. This demonstrates the limitations of unidimensional reporting and analyses and highlights the ways that race and gender intersect to shape COVID-19 outcomes.
美国在 COVID-19 结局方面存在明显的性别和种族不平等现象:男性的死亡率高于女性,黑人的死亡率高于白人。然而,尚未探索的是性别和种族如何相互作用影响 COVID-19 结局。
利用可用数据描述美国两个州内不同性别和种族群体之间的 COVID-19 死亡率特征,旨在了解 COVID-19 死亡中明显的性别差异如何因种族而异。
本观察性研究使用了截至 2020 年 9 月 21 日乔治亚州(GA)和密歇根州(MI)的 COVID-19 死亡率数据。
我们为每个性别-种族-年龄组计算特定年龄的死亡率,并为每个种族-性别组计算年龄标准化的死亡率。我们使用年龄标准化率比和率差来研究种族内性别差异和性别内种族差异。
在种族内,男性的 COVID-19 死亡率高于女性。在所有种族性别组中,黑人男性的死亡率最高(在 MI:254.6,每 100000 人死亡,95%CI:241.1-268.2,在 GA:128.5,95%CI:121.0-135.9)。在 MI,黑人女性(147.1,95%CI:138.7-155.4)的 COVID-19 死亡率高于白人男性(39.1,95%CI:37.3-40.9)、白人女性(29.7,95%CI:28.3-31.0)和亚裔/太平洋岛民男性和女性。GA 的 COVID-19 死亡率也呈现出相同的模式。在 MI,黑人个体的男女死亡率比为 1.7(1.5-2.0),而白人个体的死亡率比仅为 1.3(1.2-1.5)。
尽管总体而言,男性的 COVID-19 死亡率高于女性,但我们的研究结果表明,这种性别差异在不同种族群体中并不存在。这表明了单一维度报告和分析的局限性,并强调了种族和性别相互作用影响 COVID-19 结局的方式。