LINE

    Text:AAAPrint
    Society

    U.S. COVID-19 cases, deaths increase with higher income inequality: study

    1
    2021-01-26 04:10:26Xinhua Editor : Wang Fan ECNS App Download

    U.S. counties with higher income inequality faced higher rates of COVID-19 infections and deaths in the first 200 days of the pandemic, and counties with higher proportions of Black or Hispanic residents also had higher rates, a study of the University of Illinois (UI) found.

    The researchers' analysis included 3,141 of 3,142 counties in the United States with available data, with the remaining county excluded due to incomplete information. The 200 days for which they collected data spanned Jan. 22, 2020, when the first U.S. case was confirmed, to Aug. 8.

    Controlling for other variables, the researchers found that a one-percent increase in a county's Black population corresponded to an average 1.9-percent increase in infections and a 2.6-percent increase in mortality due to COVID-19. A one-percent increase in a county's Hispanic population corresponded to an average 2.4-percent increase in incidence and a 1.9-percent increase in mortality.

    A one-percent rise in a county's income inequality, as determined by a research measure called the Gini index, corresponded to an average 2-percent rise in COVID-19 incidence and a 3-percent rise in mortality. The researchers noted that the average Gini index in U.S. counties was 44.5 and ranged from 25.7 to 66.5, based on a 100-point scale.

    Among other study results, the researchers found that the rate of virus infection was lower by an average of 32 percent in counties that were part of states covered by the Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act, though they found no association with mortality rates.

    The findings suggested that "High levels of income inequality harm population health ... irrespective of racial/ethnic composition," said the researchers,

    No matter how they analyzed the data, "two things emerged. One is the racial and ethnic dimension, the other is the income inequality dimension. They're always there, always strong," said lead author Tim Liao, head of the sociology department at UI.

    "Many studies have concluded that COVID-19 has revealed the fault lines of inequality in the United States," the researchers wrote. "This study expands that picture by illustrating how county-level income inequality matters, in itself and through its interaction with racial/ethnic composition, to systematically disadvantage Black and Hispanic communities."

    The findings, posted on UI's website on Monday, have been published by JAMA Network Open.

    MorePhoto

    Most popular in 24h

    MoreTop news

    MoreVideo

    LINE
    Back to top Links | About Us | Jobs | Contact Us | Privacy Policy
    Copyright ©1999-2021 Chinanews.com. All rights reserved.
    Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
    主站蜘蛛池模板: 贵溪市| 察哈| 静乐县| 横峰县| 酉阳| 神农架林区| 陆良县| 迁安市| 江油市| 抚顺县| 婺源县| 柘城县| 庆元县| 攀枝花市| 麻阳| 祁连县| 房产| 博客| 仪陇县| 安化县| 陵川县| 林周县| 清新县| 兴国县| 兰州市| 应城市| 吴旗县| 舟山市| 建水县| 定州市| 南溪县| 盘山县| 广德县| 峨眉山市| 肥乡县| 阳泉市| 义马市| 武宣县| 合山市| 桐柏县| 商丘市|