Yu Qingzhao, Cao Wentao, Hamer Diana, Urbanek Norman, Straif-Bourgeois Susanne, Cormier Stephania, Ferguson Tekeda, Richmond-Bryant Jennifer
Biostatistics Program, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, LA 70112.
Division of Academic Affairs, Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center, Baton Rouge, LA 70808.
medRxiv. 2022 Jul 29:2022.07.27.22278118. doi: 10.1101/2022.07.27.22278118.
To investigate relationships between race and COVID-19 hospitalizations, intensive care unit (ICU) admissions, and mortality over time and which characteristics, may mediate COVID-19 associations.
We analyzed hospital admissions, ICU admissions, and mortality among positive COVID-19 cases within the ten-hospital Franciscan Ministries of Our Lady Health System around the Mississippi River Industrial Corridor in Louisiana over four waves of the pandemic from March 1, 2020 - August 31, 2021. Associations between race and each outcome were tested, and multiple mediation analysis was performed to test if other demographic, socioeconomic, or air pollution variables mediate the race-outcome relationships.
Race was associated with each outcome over the study duration and during most waves. Early in the pandemic, hospitalization, ICU admission, and mortality rates were greater among Black patients, but as the pandemic progressed these rates became greater in White patients. However, Black patients were still disproportionately represented in these measures. Age was a significant mediator for all outcomes across waves, while comorbidity and emissions of naphthalene and chloroprene acted as mediators for the full study period.
The role of race evolved throughout the pandemic in Louisiana, but Black patients bore a disproportionate impact. Naphthalene and chloroprene air pollution partially explained the long-term associations. Our findings imply that air pollution might contribute to the increased COVID-19 hospitalizations and mortality among Black residents in Louisiana but likely do not explain most of the effect of race.
研究种族与新冠病毒感染住院治疗、重症监护病房(ICU)收治情况及死亡率随时间的关系,以及哪些特征可能介导新冠病毒感染的相关联系。
我们分析了2020年3月1日至2021年8月31日疫情的四个阶段中,路易斯安那州密西西比河工业走廊沿线十家圣母健康系统方济各会医院内新冠病毒检测呈阳性患者的住院治疗、ICU收治情况及死亡率。测试了种族与各结果之间的关联,并进行了多重中介分析,以检验其他人口统计学、社会经济或空气污染变量是否介导种族与结果之间的关系。
在研究期间及大多数阶段,种族与各结果均有关联。在疫情早期,黑人患者的住院率、ICU收治率和死亡率更高,但随着疫情的发展,这些比率在白人患者中变得更高。然而,在这些指标中,黑人患者的占比仍然过高。年龄是各阶段所有结果的重要中介因素,而合并症以及萘和氯丁二烯的排放则在整个研究期间起到了中介作用。
在路易斯安那州,种族的作用在整个疫情期间有所演变,但黑人患者受到的影响 disproportionately。萘和氯丁二烯空气污染部分解释了长期关联。我们的研究结果表明,空气污染可能导致路易斯安那州黑人居民新冠病毒感染住院率和死亡率上升,但可能无法解释种族影响的大部分原因。