Department of Ophthalmology, School of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Department of Political Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2023 Apr;10(2):834-843. doi: 10.1007/s40615-022-01272-z. Epub 2022 Mar 3.
Higher COVID-19 incidence and morbidity have been documented for US Black and Hispanic populations but not as clearly for other racial and ethnic groups. Efforts to elucidate the mechanisms underlying racial health disparities can be confounded by the relationship between race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status.
Examine race/ethnicity and social vulnerability effects on COVID-19 outcomes in the San Francisco Bay Area, an ethnically and socioeconomically diverse region, using geocoded patient records from 2020 in the University of California, San Francisco Health system.
Higher social vulnerability, but not race/ethnicity, was associated with less frequent testing yet a higher likelihood of testing positive. Asian hospitalization rates (11.5%) were double that of White patients (5.4%) and exceeded the rates for Black (9.3%) and Hispanic patients (6.9%). A modest relationship between higher hospitalization rates and increasing social vulnerability was evident only for White patients. Hispanic patients had the highest years of expected life lost due to COVID-19.
COVID-19 outcomes were not consistently explained by greater social vulnerability. Asian individuals showed disproportionately high rates of hospitalization regardless of social vulnerability status. Study of the San Francisco Bay Area population not only provides valuable insights into the differential contributions of race/ethnicity and social determinants of health to COVID-19 outcomes but also emphasizes that all racial groups have experienced the toll of the pandemic, albeit in different ways and to varying degrees.
美国黑人和西班牙裔人群的 COVID-19 发病率和患病率较高,但其他种族和族裔群体的情况则不那么明显。为了阐明导致种族健康差异的机制,种族/民族和社会经济地位之间的关系可能会使努力变得复杂。
利用 2020 年加州大学旧金山分校医疗系统中地理编码的患者记录,在旧金山湾区(一个种族和社会经济多样化的地区),检查种族/民族和社会脆弱性对 COVID-19 结局的影响。
更高的社会脆弱性,但不是种族/民族,与检测频率较低但检测呈阳性的可能性较高有关。亚洲人的住院率(11.5%)是白人患者的两倍(5.4%),超过了黑人和西班牙裔患者(分别为 9.3%和 6.9%)。只有白人患者的住院率与社会脆弱性增加之间存在适度的关系。因 COVID-19 而失去的预期寿命最高的是西班牙裔患者。
COVID-19 的结果并不能完全用更高的社会脆弱性来解释。无论社会脆弱性状况如何,亚洲人住院的比例都过高。对旧金山湾区人口的研究不仅提供了有关种族/民族和健康的社会决定因素对 COVID-19 结局的不同贡献的宝贵见解,而且还强调,所有种族群体都经历了大流行的代价,尽管方式不同,程度不同。