Landman Joshua M, Steger-May Karen, Joynt Maddox Karen E, Hammond Gmerice, Gupta Aditi, Rauseo Adriana M, Zhao Min, Foraker Randi E
Institute for Informatics, Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Division of Computational and Data Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
JAMIA Open. 2021 Dec 22;4(4):ooab111. doi: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooab111. eCollection 2021 Oct.
To estimate the risk of hospital admission and mortality from COVID-19 to patients and measure the association of race and area-level social vulnerability with those outcomes.
Using patient records collected at a multisite hospital system from April 2020 to October 2020, the risk of hospital admission and the risk of mortality were estimated for patients who tested positive for COVID-19 and were admitted to the hospital for COVID-19, respectively, using generalized estimating equations while controlling for patient race, patient area-level social vulnerability, and time course of the pandemic.
Black individuals were 3.57 as likely (95% CI, 3.18-4.00) to be hospitalized than White people, and patients living in the most disadvantaged areas were 2.61 times as likely (95% CI, 2.26-3.02) to be hospitalized than those living in the least disadvantaged areas. While Black patients had lower raw mortality than White patients, mortality was similar after controlling for comorbidities and social vulnerability.
Our findings point to potent correlates of race and socioeconomic status, including resource distribution, employment, and shared living spaces, that may be associated with inequitable burden of disease across patients of different races.
Public health and policy interventions should address these social factors when responding to the next pandemic.
评估新冠肺炎患者住院和死亡风险,并衡量种族及地区层面的社会脆弱性与这些结果之间的关联。
利用2020年4月至2020年10月在一个多地点医院系统收集的患者记录,分别对新冠病毒检测呈阳性并因新冠肺炎入院的患者,采用广义估计方程估计其住院风险和死亡风险,同时控制患者种族、患者地区层面的社会脆弱性以及疫情的时间进程。
黑人住院的可能性是白人的3.57倍(95%置信区间,3.18 - 4.00),生活在最贫困地区的患者住院可能性是生活在最不贫困地区患者的2.61倍(95%置信区间,2.26 - 3.02)。虽然黑人患者的原始死亡率低于白人患者,但在控制合并症和社会脆弱性后,死亡率相似。
我们的研究结果指出了种族和社会经济地位的有力相关因素,包括资源分配、就业和共享生活空间,这些因素可能与不同种族患者之间不公平的疾病负担相关。
公共卫生和政策干预措施在应对下一次疫情时应解决这些社会因素。