(Press-News.org) More than four years after the COVID-19 pandemic caused the world to come to a standstill, lessons in pandemic response are still being learned. What we know: the global pandemic disproportionately affected racial and ethnic minority groups across the U.S., with Black and Hispanic individuals being three to four times more likely to die from COVID compared to white individuals.
Daniel Harris, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology in the University of Delaware's College of Health Sciences (CHS), took a deep dive into rarely obtained COVID-19 testing data. Harris led a team of investigators that included Walgreens and primary investigator Vincent Mor, professor of health services, policy and practice at Brown University, on a $1.9 million National Institute on Aging grant to examine the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on population health.
Harris and co-authors assessed 18 million COVID tests for racial and ethnic disparities in testing access and used whole genome sequencing to identify differences in novel variants of concern. Their research was recently published in the journal Frontiers in Public Health.
The cross-sectional study of free COVID tests from May 2021 through February 2022 found that non-white individuals were more likely to test positive for COVID-19.
“Racial and ethnic differences in COVID-19 positivity can be attributed to several factors, many of which are rooted or stem from systemic racism,” said Harris. “Racial differences in housing, density, job type, accessibility of healthcare services, and medical trust and mistrust contribute to COVID-19 inequities.”
He also attributed the finding to social risk exposure and community-level factors.
“Communities with larger populations of Black and Hispanic individuals show greater transmission, which increases one’s absolute risk of infection at the individual level,” Harris said.
The study’s authors did not measure whether individuals seeking testing were vaccinated against COVID-19.
Harris and coauthors also used genome sequencing on a subset of positive tests to explore differences in who was more likely to test positive for novel variants of concern like alpha, delta, and omicron. They found the omicron variant was more prevalent in racial and ethnic minority groups during its emergence, especially in urban settings.
“When members of marginalized communities get infected with novel variants of a virus, they bear the brunt of any potential differences in morbidity and mortality that result from the virus changing over time,” said Harris. “If a new variant is more severe or transmissible, they are the first to experience it.”
Walgreens and other pharmacies served as key players during the pandemic response to increase access to testing among vulnerable populations. That showed in the test results.
“The proportion of tests that were done roughly matched U.S. demographic statistics among Black, white, and Hispanic people, which gives us insight that those programs successfully accessed those populations.”
However, there’s a caveat.
“If non-white people experienced a greater disease burden, we expected to see them overrepresented in the testing data,” said Harris. “If that population is more likely to get sick, we should see more of them getting tested. A lack of representation implies continued inequities in testing access and use.”
Harris hopes to see more academic-private partnerships like this in the interest of public health.
“Leveraging health administrative databases that collect data in real-time is useful to public health surveillance and should be more widely accessible,” he said. “But accessing these data is expensive, and privacy barriers are also in play.”
However, research like this demonstrates that these types of analyses are possible.
“These data tell us important things about population health, and these mechanisms can be built into future pandemic response,” he said. “U.S. data infrastructure needs a massive overhaul; there are a lot of gaps, and that’s something we haven’t fully learned as a public health community, and it hurts our response to pandemics.”
END
Uncovering pandemic inequities
UD epidemiology researcher finds social disparities in COVID testing access, variant impact
2024-10-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Microbiome researcher awarded NIH Transformative Research Award to pursue personalized treatment for gut diseases
2024-10-09
Baylor University researcher Aaron Wright, Ph.D., has earned a $5.6 million National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director’s Transformative Research Award for a project that he and collaborators hope could lead to personalized – and revolutionary – treatments for gut microbiome diseases like Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Crohn’s, Ulcerative Colitis and more. Wright, a nationally recognized microbiome researcher and chemical biologist who serves as The Schofield Endowed Chair in Biomedical Science in Baylor’s Department of Biology, will partner on the project with colleagues from Weill ...
Teresa Bowman, Ph.D., named Chair of Developmental & Molecular Biology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine
2024-10-09
October 9, 2024—(BRONX, NY)—Stem cell researcher Teresa Bowman, Ph.D., has been appointed chair of the department of developmental & molecular biology (DMB) at Albert Einstein College of Medicine after a comprehensive national search. Dr. Bowman will begin her new role on December 1, following the longtime leadership of Richard Stanley, Ph.D.
“Dr. Bowman has demonstrated her leadership abilities, commitment to mentorship, and dedication to the College of Medicine since she ...
Legal system fails to protect people from malicious copyright cases at the cost of sexual privacy, study warns
2024-10-09
Changes need to be made to the UK legal system to protect people from exploitative litigation designed to prey on vulnerabilities, a new study warns.
Reforms need to be made to protect adults from unfairness during copyright enforcement legal proceedings. This would also help to prevent children being exposed to adult pornography online.
The malicious litigation typically involves copyright holders or their agents of online pornographic works obtaining contact details of internet users via a court order to ...
Ancient climate analysis reveals unknown global processes
2024-10-09
According to highly cited conventional models, cooling and a major drop in sea levels about 34 million years ago should have led to widespread continental erosion and deposited gargantuan amounts of sandy material onto the ocean floor. This was, after all, one of the most drastic climate transitions on Earth since the demise of the dinosaurs.
Yet a new Stanford review of hundreds of studies going back decades contrastingly reports that across the margins of all seven continents, little to no sediment has ever been found dating back to this transition. The discovery of this globally extensive gap in the geologic record was published this week in Earth-Science Reviews.
“The ...
Gene therapy shows long-term benefit for patients with a rare pediatric brain disease
2024-10-09
Cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (CALD) is a rare progressive, genetic brain disease that primarily presents in young boys, causing loss of neurological function and ultimately leading to early death. Researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, Boston Children’s Hospital, and collaborators have shown that six years after treatment with the first gene therapy approved for CALD, 94 percent of patients have had no decline in neurological functioning, with over 80 percent remaining free of major disability. Findings, published in two articles in the New England Journal of Medicine, describe long-term outcomes ...
Do people with MS have an increased risk of cancer?
2024-10-09
MINNEAPOLIS – A new study has found some cancers to be slightly more frequent in people with multiple sclerosis (MS) than in people without MS. The study is published in the October 9, 2024, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Types of cancers found to have a small increased risk include bladder, brain and cervical cancers. The study does not prove that MS increases a person’s risk of cancer. It only shows an association.
With MS, the body’s immune system attacks myelin, the fatty, white substance that insulates and protects the nerves. MS is chronic and can be unpredictable and disabling.
“People ...
New research on octopus-inspired technology successfully maneuvers underwater objects
2024-10-09
Using mechanisms inspired by nature to create new technological innovations is a signature of one Virginia Tech research team. The group led by Associate Professor Michael Bartlett has created an octopus-inspired adhesive, inspired by the shape of octopus suckers, that can quickly grab and controllably release challenging underwater objects.
Having the ability to grab and release these underwater objects like heavy rocks, small shells, and soft beads, and other debris could be a powerful tool for underwater salvage and even rescue operations. Their findings have been published in Advanced Science.
This work was performed with undergraduate researchers Austin Via, Aldo Heredia, ...
Newly discovered Late Cretaceous birds may have carried heavy prey like extant raptors
2024-10-09
Newly discovered ancient birds from Late Cretaceous North America were hawk-sized and had powerful raptor-like feet, according to a study published October 9, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Alexander Clark of the University of Chicago, U.S. and colleagues.
The most diverse birds during the Cretaceous Period were a now-extinct group called enantiornithines, known from all over the world during this time. However, enantiornithines and other Mesozoic birds are mainly known from Lower Cretaceous deposits, with a relatively poor record ...
Bat species richness in San Diego, C.A. decreases as artificial lights, urbanization, and unconserved land increase, with Townsend's big-eared bat especially affected
2024-10-09
Bat species richness in San Diego, C.A. decreases as artificial lights, urbanization, and unconserved land increase, with Townsend's big-eared bat especially affected
###
Article URL: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0310812
Article Title: Quantification of threats to bats at localized spatial scales for conservation and management
Author Countries: U.S.A.
Funding: The United States Geological Survey Western Ecological Research Center and Ecosystems Mission Area provided funding and support, and the National ...
Satellite data shows massive bombs dropped in dangerous proximity to Gaza Strip hospitals in 2023
2024-10-09
Satellite data on the proximity of hundreds of M-84 bomb craters to hospitals in the Gaza Strip suggests that, as of November 2023, hospitals were not being given special protection from indiscriminate bombing, as mandated by international humanitarian law. That is one finding out of a new study published this week in PLOS Global Public Health by Dennis Kunichoff of Harvard University, and colleagues.
On October 7, 2023, Israel launched a major military campaign in the Gaza Strip in response to Hamas militant attacks in Israel. Among the munitions being used are United-States-provided Mark-84 (M-84) bombs, which are air-dropped explosive munitions that shoot more than 1000 pounds ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Sleeping in on weekends may help boost teens’ mental health
Study: Teens use cellphones for an hour a day at school
After more than two years of war, Palestinian children are hungry, denied education and “like the living dead”
The untold story of life with Prader-Willi syndrome - according to the siblings who live it
How the parasite that ‘gave up sex’ found more hosts – and why its victory won’t last
When is it time to jump? The boiling frog problem of AI use in physics education
Twitter data reveals partisan divide in understanding why pollen season's getting worse
AI is quick but risky for updating old software
Revolutionizing biosecurity: new multi-omics framework to transform invasive species management
From ancient herb to modern medicine: new review unveils the multi-targeted healing potential of Borago officinalis
Building a global scientific community: Biological Diversity Journal announces dual recruitment of Editorial Board and Youth Editorial Board members
Microbes that break down antibiotics help protect ecosystems under drug pollution
Smart biochar that remembers pollutants offers a new way to clean water and recycle biomass
Rice genes matter more than domestication in shaping plant microbiomes
Ticking time bomb: Some farmers report as many as 70 tick encounters over a 6-month period
Turning garden and crop waste into plastics
Scientists discover ‘platypus galaxies’ in the early universe
Seeing thyroid cancer in a new light: when AI meets label-free imaging in the operating room
Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio may aid risk stratification in depressive disorder
2026 Seismological Society of America Annual Meeting
AI-powered ECG analysis offers promising path for early detection of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, says Mount Sinai researchers
GIMM uncovers flaws in lab-grown heart cells and paves the way for improved treatments
Cracking the evolutionary code of sleep
Medications could help the aging brain cope with surgery, memory impairment
Back pain linked to worse sleep years later in men over 65, according to study
CDC urges ‘shared decision-making’ on some childhood vaccines; many unclear about what that means
New research finds that an ‘equal treatment’ approach to economic opportunity advertising can backfire
Researchers create shape-shifting, self-navigating microparticles
Science army mobilizes to map US soil microbiome
Researchers develop new tools to turn grain crops into biosensors
[Press-News.org] Uncovering pandemic inequitiesUD epidemiology researcher finds social disparities in COVID testing access, variant impact






