Elizabeth Wrigley-Field (
Sarah Garcia is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2021 Oct;40(10):1644-1653. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2021.00365. Epub 2021 Sep 15.
Substantial racial and ethnic disparities in COVID-19 mortality have been observed at the state and national levels. However, less is known about how race and ethnicity and neighborhood-level disadvantage may intersect to contribute to both COVID-19 mortality and excess mortality during the pandemic. To assess this potential interaction of race and ethnicity with neighborhood disadvantage, we link death certificate data from Minnesota from the period 2017-20 to the Area Deprivation Index to examine hyperlocal disparities in mortality. Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) standardized COVID-19 mortality was 459 deaths per 100,000 population in the most disadvantaged neighborhoods compared with 126 per 100,000 in the most advantaged. Total mortality increased in 2020 by 14 percent for non-Hispanic White people and 41 percent for BIPOC. Statistical decompositions show that most of this growth in racial and ethnic disparity is associated with mortality gaps between White people and communities of color within the same levels of area disadvantage, rather than with the fact that White people live in more advantaged areas. Policy interventions to reduce COVID-19 mortality must consider neighborhood context.
在州和国家层面上,已经观察到 COVID-19 死亡率存在显著的种族和民族差异。然而,人们对种族、民族和社区劣势如何相互作用导致 COVID-19 死亡率和大流行期间的超额死亡率知之甚少。为了评估种族和民族与社区劣势之间的这种潜在相互作用,我们将明尼苏达州 2017-20 年期间的死亡证明数据与地区贫困指数联系起来,以检查死亡率的超局部差异。在最不利的社区,黑人和原住民以及有色人种(BIPOC)的标准化 COVID-19 死亡率为每 10 万人 459 人死亡,而在最有利的社区则为每 10 万人 126 人死亡。非西班牙裔白人的总死亡率在 2020 年增加了 14%,而 BIPOC 的总死亡率则增加了 41%。统计分解表明,这种种族和民族差异的增长主要与同一地区劣势水平下白人和有色人种社区之间的死亡率差距有关,而不是与白人生活在更有利地区的事实有关。减少 COVID-19 死亡率的政策干预措施必须考虑社区环境。