Cargando…

Elevated COVID19 mortality risk in detroit area hospitals among patients from census tracts with extreme socioeconomic vulnerability

BACKGROUND: the incidence of novel coronavirus disease (COVID19) is elevated in areas with heightened socioeconomic vulnerability. Early reports from US hospitals also implicated social disadvantage and chronic disease history as COVID19 mortality risk factors. However, the relationship between race...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sandhu, Avnish, Korzeniewski, Steven J., Polistico, Jordan, Pinnamaneni, Harshita, Reddy, Sushmitha Nanja, Oudeif, Ahmed, Meyers, Jessica, Sidhu, Nikki, Levy, Phillip, Samavati, Lobelia, Badr, M.Safwan, Sobel, Jack D., Sherwin, Robert, Chopra, Teena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8022031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33842873
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2021.100814
_version_ 1783674859974295552
author Sandhu, Avnish
Korzeniewski, Steven J.
Polistico, Jordan
Pinnamaneni, Harshita
Reddy, Sushmitha Nanja
Oudeif, Ahmed
Meyers, Jessica
Sidhu, Nikki
Levy, Phillip
Samavati, Lobelia
Badr, M.Safwan
Sobel, Jack D.
Sherwin, Robert
Chopra, Teena
author_facet Sandhu, Avnish
Korzeniewski, Steven J.
Polistico, Jordan
Pinnamaneni, Harshita
Reddy, Sushmitha Nanja
Oudeif, Ahmed
Meyers, Jessica
Sidhu, Nikki
Levy, Phillip
Samavati, Lobelia
Badr, M.Safwan
Sobel, Jack D.
Sherwin, Robert
Chopra, Teena
author_sort Sandhu, Avnish
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: the incidence of novel coronavirus disease (COVID19) is elevated in areas with heightened socioeconomic vulnerability. Early reports from US hospitals also implicated social disadvantage and chronic disease history as COVID19 mortality risk factors. However, the relationship between race and COVID19 mortality remains unclear. METHODS: we examined in-hospital COVID19 mortality risk factors in a multi-hospital tertiary health care system that serves greater Detroit, Michigan, a predominantly African American city with high rates of poverty and chronic disease. Consecutive adult patients who presented to emergency departments and tested positive for COVID19 from 3/11/2020 through 4/18/2020 were included. Using log-binomial regression, we assessed the relationship between in-hospital mortality and residence in census tracts that were flagged for extreme socioeconomic vulnerability, patient-level demographics, and clinical comorbidities. FINDINGS: a total of 1,015 adults tested positive for COVID19 during the study period; 80% identified as Black people, 52% were male and 53% were ≥ 65 years of age. The median body mass index was 30•4 and the median Charlson Comorbidity Index score was 4. Patients from census tracts that were flagged for vulnerability related to socioeconomic status had a higher mortality rate than their peers who resided in less vulnerable census tracts (β 0.26, standard error (SE) 0.11, degrees of freedom (df) 378, t-value (t) 2.27, exp(β) 1.29, p-value 0.02). Adjustment for age category, Black race, sex and/or the Charlson Comorbidity Index score category reduced the magnitude of association by less than 10% [exp(β) 1.29 vs. 1.21]. Black race [p = 0.38] and sex [p = 0.62] were not associated with mortality in this sample. INTERPRETATION: people who lived in areas flagged for extreme socioeconomic vulnerability had elevated mortality risk in our predominantly African-American cohort of COVID19 patients who were able to seek hospital care during the so-called ‘first wave’ of the pandemic. By contrast, Black race was not associated with mortality in our sample.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8022031
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-80220312021-04-06 Elevated COVID19 mortality risk in detroit area hospitals among patients from census tracts with extreme socioeconomic vulnerability Sandhu, Avnish Korzeniewski, Steven J. Polistico, Jordan Pinnamaneni, Harshita Reddy, Sushmitha Nanja Oudeif, Ahmed Meyers, Jessica Sidhu, Nikki Levy, Phillip Samavati, Lobelia Badr, M.Safwan Sobel, Jack D. Sherwin, Robert Chopra, Teena EClinicalMedicine Research Paper BACKGROUND: the incidence of novel coronavirus disease (COVID19) is elevated in areas with heightened socioeconomic vulnerability. Early reports from US hospitals also implicated social disadvantage and chronic disease history as COVID19 mortality risk factors. However, the relationship between race and COVID19 mortality remains unclear. METHODS: we examined in-hospital COVID19 mortality risk factors in a multi-hospital tertiary health care system that serves greater Detroit, Michigan, a predominantly African American city with high rates of poverty and chronic disease. Consecutive adult patients who presented to emergency departments and tested positive for COVID19 from 3/11/2020 through 4/18/2020 were included. Using log-binomial regression, we assessed the relationship between in-hospital mortality and residence in census tracts that were flagged for extreme socioeconomic vulnerability, patient-level demographics, and clinical comorbidities. FINDINGS: a total of 1,015 adults tested positive for COVID19 during the study period; 80% identified as Black people, 52% were male and 53% were ≥ 65 years of age. The median body mass index was 30•4 and the median Charlson Comorbidity Index score was 4. Patients from census tracts that were flagged for vulnerability related to socioeconomic status had a higher mortality rate than their peers who resided in less vulnerable census tracts (β 0.26, standard error (SE) 0.11, degrees of freedom (df) 378, t-value (t) 2.27, exp(β) 1.29, p-value 0.02). Adjustment for age category, Black race, sex and/or the Charlson Comorbidity Index score category reduced the magnitude of association by less than 10% [exp(β) 1.29 vs. 1.21]. Black race [p = 0.38] and sex [p = 0.62] were not associated with mortality in this sample. INTERPRETATION: people who lived in areas flagged for extreme socioeconomic vulnerability had elevated mortality risk in our predominantly African-American cohort of COVID19 patients who were able to seek hospital care during the so-called ‘first wave’ of the pandemic. By contrast, Black race was not associated with mortality in our sample. Elsevier 2021-04-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8022031/ /pubmed/33842873 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2021.100814 Text en © 2021 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Sandhu, Avnish
Korzeniewski, Steven J.
Polistico, Jordan
Pinnamaneni, Harshita
Reddy, Sushmitha Nanja
Oudeif, Ahmed
Meyers, Jessica
Sidhu, Nikki
Levy, Phillip
Samavati, Lobelia
Badr, M.Safwan
Sobel, Jack D.
Sherwin, Robert
Chopra, Teena
Elevated COVID19 mortality risk in detroit area hospitals among patients from census tracts with extreme socioeconomic vulnerability
title Elevated COVID19 mortality risk in detroit area hospitals among patients from census tracts with extreme socioeconomic vulnerability
title_full Elevated COVID19 mortality risk in detroit area hospitals among patients from census tracts with extreme socioeconomic vulnerability
title_fullStr Elevated COVID19 mortality risk in detroit area hospitals among patients from census tracts with extreme socioeconomic vulnerability
title_full_unstemmed Elevated COVID19 mortality risk in detroit area hospitals among patients from census tracts with extreme socioeconomic vulnerability
title_short Elevated COVID19 mortality risk in detroit area hospitals among patients from census tracts with extreme socioeconomic vulnerability
title_sort elevated covid19 mortality risk in detroit area hospitals among patients from census tracts with extreme socioeconomic vulnerability
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8022031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33842873
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2021.100814
work_keys_str_mv AT sandhuavnish elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT korzeniewskistevenj elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT polisticojordan elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT pinnamaneniharshita elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT reddysushmithananja elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT oudeifahmed elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT meyersjessica elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT sidhunikki elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT levyphillip elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT samavatilobelia elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT badrmsafwan elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT sobeljackd elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT sherwinrobert elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability
AT choprateena elevatedcovid19mortalityriskindetroitareahospitalsamongpatientsfromcensustractswithextremesocioeconomicvulnerability