Affiliation:
1. Center for Demographic, Urban and Environmental Studies, El Colegio de México, Mexico
Abstract
Among the groups most vulnerable to COVID-19 are Indigenous populations around the world, and in particular, the Mexican Indigenous population. We used public data made available by the General Directorate of Epidemiology of the Mexican Ministry of Health to compare the risk of COVID-19 mortality among the Indigenous and non-Indigenous Mexican population one and a half years into the pandemic. The analytical sample comprises 3,545,952 Mexicans who were diagnosed as infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 between March 18, 2020, and September 16, 2021, of which 1.0% (36,195) are Indigenous. Based on parametric survival models, our results show that the risk of death among Indigenous individuals is 52% higher than that of their non-Indigenous counterparts, regardless of age, sex, area of residence, health service, number of chronic diseases, and obesity status. These results suggest that certain structural conditions of the Mexican Indigenous population increase their vulnerability to the pandemic.
Subject
History,Anthropology,Cultural Studies
Reference42 articles.
1. COVID-19 fatality in Mexico's indigenous populations
2. Campos M., Balam X. (2020, March 30). La infraestructura hospitalaria ante el Covid-19: debilidad extrema [Hospital infrastructure in the face of Covid-19: Extreme weaknesses]. Nexos. https://www.nexos.com.mx/?p=47571
3. Estimation of risk factors for COVID-19 mortality - preliminary results
4. Early estimation of the risk factors for hospitalization and mortality by COVID-19 in Mexico
5. Cisneros A., González V. (2021). COVID-19 en México: La calidad de la atención en salud, un desafío para afrontar la pandemia [COVID-19 in Mexico: The quality of health care, a challenge to address the pandemic]. In Henrion C. T., Henríquez D. I., Schor-Landman C. (Eds.), América Latina. sociedad, política y salud en tiempos de pandemias [Latin America. society, politics and health in times of pandemics] (pp. 269–291). CLACSO-Buenos Aires; UAM-Xochimilco; UV- Xalapa; UMSS-Cochabamba; UV-Valparaíso. http://biblioteca.clacso.edu.ar/clacso/gt/20210312065632/America-Latina-Sociedad-politica-y-salud.pdf
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献