2020 年 1 月至 7/8 月加拿大按地区和个人特征分列的 COVID-19 死亡率的社会不平等:两个国家数据整合的结果。

Alexandra Blair, Sai Yi Pan, Rajendra Subedi, Fei-Ju Yang, Nicole Aitken, Colin Steensma
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:尽管很早就有关于严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒 2(SARS-CoV-2)感染和冠状病毒病 2019(COVID-19)负担的社会决定因素的报道,但加拿大有关 COVID-19 不平等现象的全国性报告一直很有限。作为泛加拿大健康不平等报告倡议(Pan-Canadian Health Inequalities Reporting Initiative)的一部分,本研究旨在利用初步数据描述加拿大 COVID-19 死亡率的不平等情况:方法:使用了两个临时的加拿大生命统计死亡数据库集成。有关 2020 年 1 月 1 日至 7 月 4 日期间私人住宅居民的死亡数据与 2016 年简式人口普查的个人层面数据相链接,并按性别和低收入状况、住宅类型、家庭类型和规模进行分类。与 2016 年人口普查地区数据相关联的 2020 年 1 月 1 日至 8 月 31 日期间的死亡数据按性别和社区民族文化构成五分位数(基于近期移民、明显少数族裔、在加拿大以外出生、不懂英语或法语的居民比例)、收入五分位数和城市居住地分列。对 COVID-19 年龄标准化死亡率(每 10 万人)的差异和组间比率进行了估算:截至 2020 年 7 月/8 月,与参照组(独立住宅居民、城市中心外居民、民族文化集中度最低或收入最高的居民区)相比,公寓居民、城市中心居民、民族文化集中度最高或收入最低的居民区的 COVID-19 相关死亡人数每 10 万人多 14 至 30 人。与参照组(男性死亡人数比女性死亡人数多 2 到 4 人)相比,这四个组别(男性死亡人数比女性死亡人数多 11 到 18 人)每 10 万人中的性别不平等现象也更严重:这些研究结果突显了处于社会经济劣势的人群如何承受了更高的总体死亡负担。讨论了未来的研究领域,以指导以健康公平为基础的大流行病应对措施。
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Social inequalities in COVID-19 mortality by area and individual-level characteristics in Canada, January to July/August 2020: Results from two national data integrations.

Background: Despite early reports of social determinants of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) burden, national Canadian reporting on COVID-19 inequalities has been limited. The objective of this study is to describe inequalities in COVID-19 mortality in Canada using preliminary data, as part of the Pan-Canadian Health Inequalities Reporting Initiative.

Methods: Two provisional Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database integrations were used. Data concerning deaths between January 1 and July 4, 2020, among private-dwelling residents were linked to individual-level data from the 2016 short-form Census, and disaggregated by sex and low-income status, dwelling type, household type and size. Data concerning deaths between January 1 and August 31, 2020 linked to 2016 Census area data were disaggregated by sex and neighbourhood ethno-cultural composition quintiles (based on the proportion of residents who are recent immigrants, visible minorities, born outside of Canada, with no knowledge of English or French), income quintiles and urban residence. The COVID-19 age-standardized mortality rate (per 100,000 population) differences and ratios between groups were estimated.

Results: As of July/August 2020, apartment dwellers, residents of urban centres, neighbourhoods with the highest ethno-cultural composition or lowest income experienced 14 to 30 more COVID-19-related deaths/100,000 compared with reference groups (residents of single-detached homes, outside of urban centres, with lowest ethno-cultural concentration or highest income, respectively). Per 100,000 population, sex/gender inequalities were also larger in these four groups (11 to 18 more male than female deaths) than in the reference groups (two to four more male than female deaths).

Conclusion: These findings highlight how populations facing socioeconomic disadvantage have experienced a higher overall burden of deaths. Areas for future research are discussed to guide health equity-informed pandemic response.

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