Assessment of sociodemographic factors associated with time to self-reported COVID-19 infection among a large multi-center prospective cohort population in the southeastern United States

Author:

Beron Andrew J.,Yukich Joshua O.,Berry Andrea A.ORCID,Correa AdolfoORCID,Keating Joseph,Bott Matthew,Wierzba Thomas F.,Weintraub William S.,Friedman-Klabanoff DeAnna J.ORCID,Mongraw-Chaffin MorganaORCID,Gibbs Michael A.,Taylor Yhenneko J.,Kissinger Patricia J.,Hayes Devin V.,Schieffelin John S.,Burke Brian K.,Oberhelman Richard A.ORCID

Abstract

Objective We aimed to investigate sociodemographic factors associated with self-reported COVID-19 infection. Methods The study population was a prospective multicenter cohort of adult volunteers recruited from healthcare systems located in the mid-Atlantic and southern United States. Between April 2020 and October 2021, participants completed daily online questionnaires about symptoms, exposures, and risk behaviors related to COVID-19, including self-reports of positive SARS CoV-2 detection tests and COVID-19 vaccination. Analysis of time from study enrollment to self-reported COVID-19 infection used a time-varying mixed effects Cox-proportional hazards framework. Results Overall, 1,603 of 27,214 study participants (5.9%) reported a positive COVID-19 test during the study period. The adjusted hazard ratio demonstrated lower risk for women, those with a graduate level degree, and smokers. A higher risk was observed for healthcare workers, those aged 18–34, those in rural areas, those from households where a member attends school or interacts with the public, and those who visited a health provider in the last year. Conclusions We identified subgroups within healthcare network populations defined by age, occupational exposure, and rural location reporting higher than average rates of COVID-19 infection for our surveillance population. These subgroups should be monitored closely in future epidemics of respiratory viral diseases.

Funder

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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