A spatiotemporal analysis of the social determinants of health for COVID-19.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Geospatial Health Pub Date : 2023-05-25 DOI:10.4081/gh.2023.1153
Claire Bonzani, Peter Scull, Daisaku Yamamoto
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Abstract

This research aims to uncover how the association between social determinants of health and COVID-19 cases and fatality rate have changed across time and space. To begin to understand these associations and show the benefits of analysing temporal and spatial variations in COVID-19, we utilized Geographically Weighted Regression (GWR). The results emphasize the advantages for using GWR in data with a spatial component, while showing the changing spatiotemporal magnitude of association between a given social determinant and cases or fatalities. While previous research has demonstrated the merits of GWR for spatial epidemiology, our study fills a gap in the literature, by examining a suite of variables across time to reveal how the pandemic unfolded across the US at a county-level spatial scale. The results speak to the importance of understanding the local effects that a social determinant may have on populations at the county level. From a public health perspective, these results can be used for an understanding of the disproportionate disease burden felt by different populations, while upholding and building upon trends observed in epidemiological literature.

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COVID-19健康社会决定因素时空分析
这项研究旨在揭示健康的社会决定因素与COVID-19病例和死亡率之间的关系如何随着时间和空间的变化而变化。为了开始了解这些关联并展示分析COVID-19时空变化的好处,我们使用了地理加权回归(GWR)。研究结果强调了在具有空间成分的数据中使用GWR的优势,同时显示了给定社会决定因素与病例或死亡之间不断变化的时空关联程度。虽然以前的研究已经证明了GWR在空间流行病学方面的优点,但我们的研究填补了文献中的空白,通过研究一系列随时间变化的变量,揭示了疫情在美国县级空间尺度上的发展情况。研究结果表明,了解一个社会决定因素可能对县一级人口产生的局部影响是非常重要的。从公共卫生的角度来看,这些结果可用于了解不同人群所感受到的不成比例的疾病负担,同时支持和发展流行病学文献中观察到的趋势。
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来源期刊
Geospatial Health
Geospatial Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
11.80%
发文量
48
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: The focus of the journal is on all aspects of the application of geographical information systems, remote sensing, global positioning systems, spatial statistics and other geospatial tools in human and veterinary health. The journal publishes two issues per year.
期刊最新文献
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