| Literature DB >> 34386742 |
Rachel Pope1,2, Prakash Ganesh1,3,2, Jill Miracle1,3,2, Romona Brazile2, Honor Wolfe2, Johnie Rose1,3,2, Kurt C Stange3, Terry Allan2, Heidi Gullett3,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Structural racism leads to adverse health outcomes, as highlighted by inequities in COVID-19 infections. We characterized Black/White disparities among pregnant women with SARS-CoV-2 in Cuyahoga County which has some of the most extreme health disparities in the U.S., such as a rate of Black infant mortality that is three times that of White counterparts.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34386742 PMCID: PMC8343238 DOI: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2021.100950
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EClinicalMedicine ISSN: 2589-5370
Demographics and risk factors.
| Black | White, Asian, Hispanic, Other | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age mean (SD) | 26·8 (5·9) | 29·2 (5·3) | 0·0062 |
| Pregnancy Indicators | |||
| Gravidity median (IQR) | 3 (2–4) | 2 (1–4) | 0·3777 |
| Parity median (IQR) | 2 (1–2) | 1 (0–2) | 0·0326 |
| Gestational Age at Infection (weeks) | 24·3 (11·9) | 24·9 (10·6) | 0·7626 |
| Trimester | 65 | 55 | 0·360 |
| Medical Comorbidities | |||
| Hypertension | 5/57 (8·8) | 2/58 (3·4) | 0·233 |
| Diabetes | 2/63 (3·2) | 2/66 (3·0) | 0·611 |
| Asthma | 12/62 (19·4) | 8/65 (12·3) | 0·276 |
| Obesity | 25/38 (65·8) | 20/45 (44·4) | 0·052 |
| Exposure History | |||
| Unknown | 27 (55·1) | 25 (45·5) | 0·326 |
| Occupational Contact* | 11 (22·4) | 4 (7·3) | 0·028 |
| Personal contact* (household spread) | 11 (22·4) | 24 (43·6) | 0·022 |
| Both personal and occupational exposure possible | 0 (0·0) | 2 (3·6) | 0·178 |
| Median Household Income (USD $) | |||
| 0–19,000 | 10 (14·9) | 1 (4·5) | 0·000 |
| 20,000–29,000 | 17 (25·4) | 1 (4·5) | |
| 30,000–39,000 | 15 (22·3) | 4 (7·3) | |
| 40,000–49,000 | 8 (11·9) | 8 (14·5) | |
| 50–74,000 | 13 (19·4) | 30 (54·5) | |
| 75,000–99,000 | 1 (1·5) | 8 (14·5) | |
| 100,000–149,000 | 2 (3·0) | 2 (3·6) | |
| 150,000–249,000 | 1(1·5) | 3 (5·5) | |
| 250,000 | 0 (0·0) | 0 (0·0) | |
| Occupational Risk Category | |||
| Unemployed | 14 (21·9) | 6 (8·8) | 0·037 |
| Working from home | 9 (14·1) | 19 (27·9) | 0·051 |
| Onsite Low-density Contact | 5 (7·8) | 5 (7·4) | 0·921 |
| Onsite High-density Contact | 36 (56·3) | 38 (55·9) | 0·966 |
| HealthCare worker | 25 (39·1) | 24 (35·8) | 0·702 |
| Frontline worker | 36 (56·3) | 37 (55·2) | 0·906 |
| Symptom Severity | |||
| Asymptomatic | 10 (13·3) | 6 (7·9) | 0·218 |
| Mild Symptoms | 51 (68·0) | 47 (61·8) | |
| Moderate Symptoms | 12 (16·0) | 22 (28·9) | |
| Severe Symptoms | 2 (2·7) | 1 (1·3) | |
| Pregnancy Outcomes | |||
| Preterm delivery | 4/18 (22·2) | 0/20 (0·0) | 0·026 |
*Of those who knew their infectious contact.
† Comparison of unemployment and the ability to work from home alone: p-value = 0·018.
Fig. 1Incidence of COVID-19 by race.
Frontline and essential workers.
| Black | White, Asian, Hispanic, Other | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital worker (Direct patient care) | 7 (25·9) | 15 (46·9) | 0·114 |
| Hospital worker (Not patient care) | 2 (7·4) | 0 (0·0) | 0·205 |
| Nursing home/Assisted living facility worker | 9 (33·3) | 5 (15·6) | 0·134 |
| Food Services | 4 (14·8) | 4 (12·5) | 1·0 |
| Retail Services | 2 (7·4) | 4 (12·5) | 0·678 |
| Personal Care Services (Beauty/hair/nails) | 1 (3·7) | 3 (9·4) | 0·617 |
| Corrections | 0 (0·0) | 1 (3·1) | 1·0 |
| Daycare | 0 (0·0) | 2 (7·4) | 0·205 |
Logistic regression analyses for the odds of having more severe symptoms.
| Crude OR (95% CI) | Adjusted OR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 1·0 (0·93–1·07) | 0·986 (0·817–1·191) |
| Race | 0·474 (0·214–1·05) | 0·235 (0·029–1·900) |
| Income | 1·317 (0·992–1·751) | 1·726 (0·921–3·236) |
| High Risk Comorbidity | 1·905 (0·718–5·051) | 5·267 (0·535–51·883) |
| Obesity | 1·412 (0·451–4·415) | 2·534 (0·416–15·436) |
| Occupation | 1·58 (1·022–2·445) | 4·487 (1·096–18·364) |
* At p < 0·1 significance level, the variables were added in the following order: income, occupation.