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COVID-19 And Racial/Ethnic Disparities In Health Risk, Employment, And Household Composition

Thomas M. Selden, Terceira A. Berdahl

2020Health Affairs407 citationsDOI

Abstract

We used data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey to explore potential explanations for racial/ethnic disparities in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) hospitalizations and mortality. Black adults in every age group were more likely than White adults to have health risks associated with severe COVID-19 illness. However, Whites were older, on average, than Blacks. Thus, when all factors were considered, Whites tended to be at higher overall risk compared with Blacks, with Asians and Hispanics having much lower overall levels of risk compared with either Whites or Blacks. We explored additional explanations for COVID-19 disparities-namely, differences in job characteristics and how they interact with household composition. Blacks at high risk for severe illness were 1.6 times as likely as Whites to live in households containing health-sector workers. Among Hispanic adults at high risk for severe illness, 64.5 percent lived in households with at least one worker who was unable to work from home, versus 56.5 percent among Black adults and only 46.6 percent among White adults.

Topics & Concepts

Ethnic groupMedicineDemographyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PandemicGerontologyMedical Expenditure Panel SurveyDiseaseEnvironmental healthHealth careInfectious disease (medical specialty)Health insuranceEconomic growthPathologySociologyAnthropologyEconomicsEmployment and Welfare StudiesHealth disparities and outcomesMigration, Health and Trauma