感染时间是2019年冠状病毒病在疫苗接种期间死亡率种族/民族差异的关键驱动因素

IF 3.8 4区 医学 Q2 IMMUNOLOGY Open Forum Infectious Diseases Pub Date : 2024-12-24 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/ofid/ofae636
Ramya Naraharisetti, Rob Trangucci, Krzysztof Sakrejda, Nina B Masters, Ryan Malosh, Emily T Martin, Marisa Eisenberg, Bruce Link, Joseph N S Eisenberg, Jon Zelner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2019年冠状病毒病死亡率的差异是由群体特定发病率(IRs)、病死率(CFRs)及其相互作用的不平等造成的。对于新发感染,如严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2,群体特异性ir和CFRs在不同的时间尺度上发生变化,这些措施的不公平可能反映了不同的社会和医疗机制。要成为公共卫生监测和政策的有用工具,对死亡率差异变化的分析必须独立地处理死亡率和病死率的变化。然而,很少有人这样做。在本分析中,我们研究了感染时间差异的单独贡献——反映了不同的感染风险因素,如居住隔离、住房和参与基本工作——以及美国密歇根州种族/民族死亡率差异随时间的下降的cfr。我们使用详细的病例数据,将2020年3月至12月3个时期的种族/民族特异性死亡率分解为其年龄特异性IR和CFR组成部分。我们在反事实模拟模型中使用这些估计来估计,如果密歇根黑人居民沿着白人居民经历的时间线感染,那么35%(95%可信区间,30%-40%)的死亡是可以避免的,从而导致2020年密歇根黑人和白人居民之间的死亡率差距减少67%(61%-72%)。这些结果清楚地说明了为什么在传染病紧急情况下“等待”感染的不同力量——结构性种族主义的一种功能——是新发感染导致疾病和死亡不平等的关键因素,但未被充分认识。
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Timing of Infection as a Key Driver of Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Coronavirus Disease 2019 Mortality Rates During the Prevaccine Period.

Disparities in coronavirus disease 2019 mortality are driven by inequalities in group-specific incidence rates (IRs), case fatality rates (CFRs), and their interaction. For emerging infections, such as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, group-specific IRs and CFRs change on different time scales, and inequities in these measures may reflect different social and medical mechanisms. To be useful tools for public health surveillance and policy, analyses of changing mortality rate disparities must independently address changes in IRs and CFRs. However, this is rarely done. In this analysis, we examine the separate contributions of disparities in the timing of infection-reflecting differential infection risk factors such as residential segregation, housing, and participation in essential work-and declining CFRs over time on mortality disparities by race/ethnicity in the US state of Michigan. We used detailed case data to decompose race/ethnicity-specific mortality rates into their age-specific IR and CFR components during each of 3 periods from March to December 2020. We used these estimates in a counterfactual simulation model to estimate that that 35% (95% credible interval, 30%-40%) of deaths in black Michigan residents could have been prevented if these residents were infected along the timeline experienced by white residents, resulting in a 67% (61%-72%) reduction in the mortality rate gap between black and white Michigan residents during 2020. These results clearly illustrate why differential power to "wait out" infection during an infectious disease emergency-a function of structural racism-is a key, underappreciated, driver of inequality in disease and death from emerging infections.

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来源期刊
Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Open Forum Infectious Diseases Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
4.80%
发文量
630
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: Open Forum Infectious Diseases provides a global forum for the publication of clinical, translational, and basic research findings in a fully open access, online journal environment. The journal reflects the broad diversity of the field of infectious diseases, and focuses on the intersection of biomedical science and clinical practice, with a particular emphasis on knowledge that holds the potential to improve patient care in populations around the world. Fully peer-reviewed, OFID supports the international community of infectious diseases experts by providing a venue for articles that further the understanding of all aspects of infectious diseases.
期刊最新文献
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