The incidence of COVID-19-related hospitalisation in migrants in the UK: Findings from the Virus Watch prospective community cohort study

IF 3.9 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of Migration and Health Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jmh.2024.100218
Wing Lam Erica Fong , Vincent G Nguyen , Rachel Burns , Yamina Boukari , Sarah Beale , Isobel Braithwaite , Thomas E Byrne , Cyril Geismar , Ellen Fragaszy , Susan Hoskins , Jana Kovar , Annalan MD Navaratnam , Youssof Oskrochi , Parth Patel , Sam Tweed , Alexei Yavlinsky , Andrew C Hayward , Robert W Aldridge
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Abstract

Background

Migrants in the United Kingdom (UK) may be at higher risk of SARS-CoV-2 exposure; however, little is known about their risk of COVID-19-related hospitalisation during waves 1–3 of the pandemic.

Methods

We analysed secondary care data linked to Virus Watch study data for adults and estimated COVID-19-related hospitalisation incidence rates by migration status. To estimate the total effect of migration status on COVID-19 hospitalisation rates, we ran mixed-effect Poisson regression for wave 1 (01/03/2020–31/08/2020; wildtype), and mixed-effect negative binomial regressions for waves 2 (01/09/2020–31/05/2021; Alpha) and 3 (01/06/2020–31/11/2021; Delta). Results of all models were then meta-analysed.

Results

Of 30,276 adults in the analyses, 26,492 (87.5 %) were UK-born and 3,784 (12.5 %) were migrants. COVID-19-related hospitalisation incidence rates for UK-born and migrant individuals across waves 1–3 were 2.7 [95 % CI 2.2–3.2], and 4.6 [3.1–6.7] per 1,000 person-years, respectively. Pooled incidence rate ratios across waves suggested increased rate of COVID-19-related hospitalisation in migrants compared to UK-born individuals in unadjusted 1.68 [1.08–2.60] and adjusted analyses 1.35 [0.71–2.60].

Conclusion

Our findings suggest migration populations in the UK have excess risk of COVID-19-related hospitalisations and underscore the need for more equitable interventions particularly aimed at COVID-19 vaccination uptake among migrants.

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英国移民中与 COVID-19 相关的住院率:病毒观察前瞻性社区队列研究的结果
背景英国(UK)的移民可能面临更高的SARS-CoV-2暴露风险;然而,人们对他们在大流行的第1-3波期间与COVID-19相关的住院风险知之甚少。方法我们分析了与病毒观察研究数据相关联的成人二级医疗数据,并根据移民身份估算了与COVID-19相关的住院率。为了估算移民身份对 COVID-19 住院率的总体影响,我们对第 1 波(01/03/2020-31/08/2020;野生型)进行了混合效应泊松回归,并对第 2 波(01/09/2020-31/05/2021;阿尔法型)和第 3 波(01/06/2020-31/11/2021;德尔塔型)进行了混合效应负二项回归。然后对所有模型的结果进行了元分析。结果 在分析的 30276 名成年人中,26492 人(87.5%)在英国出生,3784 人(12.5%)为移民。在第 1-3 波中,英国出生者和移民的 COVID-19 相关住院发病率分别为每千人年 2.7 [95 % CI 2.2-3.2] 和 4.6 [3.1-6.7]。我们的研究结果表明,与英国出生的人相比,移民与 COVID-19 相关的住院率在未经调整的分析中为 1.68 [1.08-2.60] ,在调整后的分析中为 1.35 [0.71-2.60] 。
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来源期刊
Journal of Migration and Health
Journal of Migration and Health Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
8.70%
发文量
65
审稿时长
153 days
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