Abstract
Background
The disproportionate burden of the COVID-19 pandemic on racial/ethnic
minority communities has revealed glaring inequities. However, multivariate
empirical studies investigating its determinants are still limited. We document
variation in COVID-19 case and death rates across different racial/ethnic
neighbourhoods in New York City (NYC), the initial epicentre of the U.S.
coronavirus outbreak, and conduct a multivariate ecological analysis
investigating how various neighbourhood characteristics might explain any
observed disparities.
Methods
Using ZIP-code-level COVID-19 case and death data from the NYC Department
of Health, demographic and socioeconomic data from the American Community
Survey and health data from the Centers for Disease Control’s 500 Cities
Project, we estimated a series of negative binomial regression models to assess
the relationship between neighbourhood racial/ethnic composition (majority
non-Hispanic White, majority Black, majority Hispanic and Other-type),
neighbourhood poverty, affluence, proportion of essential workers, proportion
with pre-existing health conditions and neighbourhood COVID-19 case and death
rates.
Results
COVID-19 case and death rates for majority Black, Hispanic and Other-type
minority communities are between 24% and 110% higher than those in majority
White communities. Elevated case rates are completely accounted for by the
larger presence of essential workers in minority communities but excess deaths
in Black neighbourhoods remain unexplained in the final model.
Conclusions
The unequal COVID-19 case burden borne by NYC’s minority communities is
closely tied to their representation among the ranks of essential workers.
Higher levels of pre-existing health conditions are not a sufficient
explanation for the elevated mortality burden observed in Black
communities.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Epidemiology
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