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448. Disproportionate Burden of COVID-19 on Latinx Residents among Hospitalized Patients at San Francisco’s Public Health Hospital

BACKGROUND: San Francisco implemented one of the earliest shelter-in-place public health mandates in the U.S., with flattened curves of diagnoses and deaths. We describe demographics, clinical features and outcomes of COVID-19 patients admitted to a public health hospital in a high population-densit...

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Autores principales: Jain, Vivek, Brown, Lillian B, Marquez, Carina, Rubio, Luis, Spottiswoode, Natasha, Churnet, Bethlehem, Brooks, Katherine, Zhou, Mengyu, Muldoon, Timothy, Hendrickson, Carolyn, Cattamanchi, Adithya, Gomez, Antonio, Haas, Brian, Charlebois, Edwin, Luetkemeyer, Annie, Gandhi, Monica, Havlir, Diane, Ranji, Sumant, Winston, Lisa Gail
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7777674/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.641
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author Jain, Vivek
Brown, Lillian B
Marquez, Carina
Rubio, Luis
Spottiswoode, Natasha
Churnet, Bethlehem
Brooks, Katherine
Zhou, Mengyu
Muldoon, Timothy
Hendrickson, Carolyn
Cattamanchi, Adithya
Gomez, Antonio
Haas, Brian
Charlebois, Edwin
Luetkemeyer, Annie
Luetkemeyer, Annie
Gandhi, Monica
Havlir, Diane
Ranji, Sumant
Winston, Lisa Gail
author_facet Jain, Vivek
Brown, Lillian B
Marquez, Carina
Rubio, Luis
Spottiswoode, Natasha
Churnet, Bethlehem
Brooks, Katherine
Zhou, Mengyu
Muldoon, Timothy
Hendrickson, Carolyn
Cattamanchi, Adithya
Gomez, Antonio
Haas, Brian
Charlebois, Edwin
Luetkemeyer, Annie
Luetkemeyer, Annie
Gandhi, Monica
Havlir, Diane
Ranji, Sumant
Winston, Lisa Gail
author_sort Jain, Vivek
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: San Francisco implemented one of the earliest shelter-in-place public health mandates in the U.S., with flattened curves of diagnoses and deaths. We describe demographics, clinical features and outcomes of COVID-19 patients admitted to a public health hospital in a high population-density city with an early containment response. METHODS: We analyzed inpatients with COVID-19 admitted to San Francisco General Hospital (SFGH) from 3/5/2020–5/11/2020. SFGH serves a network of >63,000 patients (32% Latinx/24% Asian/19% African American/19% Caucasian). Demographic and clinical data through 5/18/2020 were abstracted from hospital records, along with ICU and ventilator utilization, lengths of stay, and in-hospital deaths. RESULTS: Of 157 admitted patients, 105/157 (67%) were male, median age was 49 (range 19-96y), and 127/157 (81%) of patients with COVID-19 were Latinx. Crowded living conditions were common: 60/157 (38%) lived in multi-family shared housing, 12/1578 (8%) with multigenerational families, and 8/157 (5%) were homeless living in shelters. Of 102 patients with ascertained occupations, most had frontline essential jobs: 23% food service, 14% construction/home maintenance, and 10% cleaning. Overall, 86/157 (55%) of patients lived in neighborhoods home to majority Latinx and African-American populations. Overall, 45/157 (29%) of patients needed ICU care, and 26/157 (17%) required mechanical ventilation; 20/26 (77%) of ventilated patients were successfully extubated, and 137/157 (87%) were discharged home. Median hospitalization duration was 4 days (IQR, 2–10), and only 6/157 (4%) patients died in hospital. CONCLUSION: In San Francisco, where early COVID-19 mitigation was enacted, we report a stark, disproportionate COVID-19 burden on Latinx patients, who accounted for 81% of hospitalizations despite making up only 32% of the patient base and 15% of San Francisco’s total population. Latinx inpatients frequently lived in high-density settings, increasing household risk, and frequently worked essential jobs, potentially limiting the opportunity to effectively distance from others. We also report here favorable clinical outcomes and low overall mortality. However, an effective COVID-19 response must urgently address racial and ethnic disparities. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures
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spelling pubmed-77776742021-01-07 448. Disproportionate Burden of COVID-19 on Latinx Residents among Hospitalized Patients at San Francisco’s Public Health Hospital Jain, Vivek Brown, Lillian B Marquez, Carina Rubio, Luis Spottiswoode, Natasha Churnet, Bethlehem Brooks, Katherine Zhou, Mengyu Muldoon, Timothy Hendrickson, Carolyn Cattamanchi, Adithya Gomez, Antonio Haas, Brian Charlebois, Edwin Luetkemeyer, Annie Luetkemeyer, Annie Gandhi, Monica Havlir, Diane Ranji, Sumant Winston, Lisa Gail Open Forum Infect Dis Poster Abstracts BACKGROUND: San Francisco implemented one of the earliest shelter-in-place public health mandates in the U.S., with flattened curves of diagnoses and deaths. We describe demographics, clinical features and outcomes of COVID-19 patients admitted to a public health hospital in a high population-density city with an early containment response. METHODS: We analyzed inpatients with COVID-19 admitted to San Francisco General Hospital (SFGH) from 3/5/2020–5/11/2020. SFGH serves a network of >63,000 patients (32% Latinx/24% Asian/19% African American/19% Caucasian). Demographic and clinical data through 5/18/2020 were abstracted from hospital records, along with ICU and ventilator utilization, lengths of stay, and in-hospital deaths. RESULTS: Of 157 admitted patients, 105/157 (67%) were male, median age was 49 (range 19-96y), and 127/157 (81%) of patients with COVID-19 were Latinx. Crowded living conditions were common: 60/157 (38%) lived in multi-family shared housing, 12/1578 (8%) with multigenerational families, and 8/157 (5%) were homeless living in shelters. Of 102 patients with ascertained occupations, most had frontline essential jobs: 23% food service, 14% construction/home maintenance, and 10% cleaning. Overall, 86/157 (55%) of patients lived in neighborhoods home to majority Latinx and African-American populations. Overall, 45/157 (29%) of patients needed ICU care, and 26/157 (17%) required mechanical ventilation; 20/26 (77%) of ventilated patients were successfully extubated, and 137/157 (87%) were discharged home. Median hospitalization duration was 4 days (IQR, 2–10), and only 6/157 (4%) patients died in hospital. CONCLUSION: In San Francisco, where early COVID-19 mitigation was enacted, we report a stark, disproportionate COVID-19 burden on Latinx patients, who accounted for 81% of hospitalizations despite making up only 32% of the patient base and 15% of San Francisco’s total population. Latinx inpatients frequently lived in high-density settings, increasing household risk, and frequently worked essential jobs, potentially limiting the opportunity to effectively distance from others. We also report here favorable clinical outcomes and low overall mortality. However, an effective COVID-19 response must urgently address racial and ethnic disparities. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures Oxford University Press 2020-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC7777674/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.641 Text en © The Author 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Poster Abstracts
Jain, Vivek
Brown, Lillian B
Marquez, Carina
Rubio, Luis
Spottiswoode, Natasha
Churnet, Bethlehem
Brooks, Katherine
Zhou, Mengyu
Muldoon, Timothy
Hendrickson, Carolyn
Cattamanchi, Adithya
Gomez, Antonio
Haas, Brian
Charlebois, Edwin
Luetkemeyer, Annie
Luetkemeyer, Annie
Gandhi, Monica
Havlir, Diane
Ranji, Sumant
Winston, Lisa Gail
448. Disproportionate Burden of COVID-19 on Latinx Residents among Hospitalized Patients at San Francisco’s Public Health Hospital
title 448. Disproportionate Burden of COVID-19 on Latinx Residents among Hospitalized Patients at San Francisco’s Public Health Hospital
title_full 448. Disproportionate Burden of COVID-19 on Latinx Residents among Hospitalized Patients at San Francisco’s Public Health Hospital
title_fullStr 448. Disproportionate Burden of COVID-19 on Latinx Residents among Hospitalized Patients at San Francisco’s Public Health Hospital
title_full_unstemmed 448. Disproportionate Burden of COVID-19 on Latinx Residents among Hospitalized Patients at San Francisco’s Public Health Hospital
title_short 448. Disproportionate Burden of COVID-19 on Latinx Residents among Hospitalized Patients at San Francisco’s Public Health Hospital
title_sort 448. disproportionate burden of covid-19 on latinx residents among hospitalized patients at san francisco’s public health hospital
topic Poster Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7777674/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaa439.641
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