Litcius/Paper detail

Socio-economic disparities and COVID-19 in the USA

Ayan Paul, Philipp Englert, Melinda Varga

2021Journal of Physics Complexity38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract COVID-19 is not a universal killer. We study the spread of COVID-19 at the county level for the United States up until the 15th of August, 2020. We show that the prevalence of the disease and the death rate are correlated with the local socio-economic conditions often going beyond local population density distributions, especially in rural areas. We correlate the COVID-19 prevalence and death rate with data from the US Census Bureau and point out how the spreading patterns of the disease show asymmetries in urban and rural areas separately and are preferentially affecting the counties where a large fraction of the population is non-white. Our findings can be used for more targeted policy building and deployment of resources for future occurrence of a pandemic due to SARS-CoV-2. Our methodology, based on interpretable machine learning and game theory, can be extended to study the spread of other diseases.

Topics & Concepts

CensusPandemicGeographyPopulationMortality rateRural areaPoint (geometry)Economic growthDemographySoftware deploymentRural populationCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)SocioeconomicsPopulation densityDemographic economicsDiseasePrevalenceBaseline (sea)COVID-19 epidemiological studiesCOVID-19 Pandemic ImpactsData Analysis with R