Dominant Modes of Agricultural Production Helped Structure Initial COVID-19 Spread in the U.S. Midwest

Author:

Bergmann Luke1,Chaves Luis Fernando2ORCID,O’Sullivan David3,Wallace Robert G.45

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, Canada

2. Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, School of Public Health, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA

3. School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington 6012, New Zealand

4. Agroecology and Rural Economics Research Corps, St. Paul, MN 55105, USA

5. Midwest Healthy Ag, Finland, MN 55603, USA

Abstract

The spread of COVID-19 is geographically uneven in agricultural regions. Explanations proposed include differences in occupational risks, access to healthcare, racial inequalities, and approaches to public health. Here, we additionally explore the impacts of coexisting modes of agricultural production across counties from twelve midwestern U.S. states. In modeling COVID-19 spread before vaccine authorization, we employed and extended spatial statistical methods that make different assumptions about the natures and scales of underlying sociospatial processes. In the process, we also develop a novel approach to visualizing the results of geographically weighted regressions that allows us to identify distinctive regional regimes of epidemiological processes. Our approaches allowed for models using abstract spatial weights (e.g., inverse-squared distances) to be meaningfully improved by also integrating process-specific relations (e.g., the geographical relations of the food system or of commuting). We thus contribute in several ways to methods in health geography and epidemiology for identifying contextually sensitive public engagements in socio-eco-epidemiological issues. Our results further show that agricultural modes of production are associated with the spread of COVID-19, with counties more engaged in modes of regenerative agricultural production having lower COVID-19 rates than those dominated by modes of conventional agricultural production, even when accounting for other factors.

Funder

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

the Canada Research Chairs Program

the Canada Foundation for Innovation

the Digital Research Alliance of Canada

Indiana University

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Computers in Earth Sciences,Geography, Planning and Development

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