Minority health social vulnerability index and long COVID illness among a statewide, population-based study of adults with polymerase chain reaction-confirmed SARS-CoV-2.

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Archives of Public Health Pub Date : 2025-03-10 DOI:10.1186/s13690-025-01553-z
Soomin Ryu, Kristi L Allgood, Yanmei Xie, Robert C Orellana, Nancy L Fleischer
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Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected socially vulnerable communities. Some individuals experience persistent symptoms and conditions of COVID-19 illness known as long COVID. As little research has examined how social vulnerability is related to long COVID, we studied this topic using Minority Health Social Vulnerability Index (MHSVI), specifically created for the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S.

Methods: We merged county-level MHSVI data with population-based data of Michigan adults with PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection between March 2020 and May 2022 based on respondents' county of residence. We examined the relationship between county-level MHSVI (binary: high social vulnerability ≥ 75th percentile) and two long COVID measurements, assessed a median of 18.8 months after their initial infection: (1) ongoing long COVID (yes/no) and (2) long COVID diagnosis (yes/no). We conducted modified Poisson regression models with robust standard errors to estimate prevalence ratio (PR) between associations of MHSVI and long COVID overall and by six MHSVI themes (socioeconomic status, household composition/disability, minority/language, housing type/transportation, healthcare access, medical vulnerability), adjusting for individual-level and county-level covariates.

Results: Living in high MHSVI counties was not associated with ongoing long COVID or long COVID diagnosis. However, the associations differed by theme of MHSVI: respondents in highly socially vulnerable counties assessed by medical vulnerability had 1.32 times higher prevalence of long COVID diagnosis (95% CI:1.12 - 1.57). There were no statistically significant associations in other themes after the adjustment for covariates.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest the importance of upstream social determinants of health during public health emergencies and provide evidence that medically vulnerable communities need additional public health resources to cope with long COVID among their residents.

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来源期刊
Archives of Public Health
Archives of Public Health Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
3.00%
发文量
244
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: rchives of Public Health is a broad scope public health journal, dedicated to publishing all sound science in the field of public health. The journal aims to better the understanding of the health of populations. The journal contributes to public health knowledge, enhances the interaction between research, policy and practice and stimulates public health monitoring and indicator development. The journal considers submissions on health outcomes and their determinants, with clear statements about the public health and policy implications. Archives of Public Health welcomes methodological papers (e.g., on study design and bias), papers on health services research, health economics, community interventions, and epidemiological studies dealing with international comparisons, the determinants of inequality in health, and the environmental, behavioural, social, demographic and occupational correlates of health and diseases.
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