Disparities in COVID-19 Fatalities among Working Californians
Disparities in COVID-19 Fatalities among Working Californians
Abstract BackgroundInformation on the occupational distribution of COVID-19 mortality is limited. ObjectiveTo characterize COVID-19 fatalities among working Californians. DesignRetrospective study of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 fatalities with dates of death from January 1 to December 31, 2020. SettingCalifornia. ParticipantsCOVID-19 accounted for 8,050 (9.9%) of 81,468 fatalities among Californians 18-64 years old. Of these decedents, 2,486 (30.9%) were matched to state employment records and classified as “confirmed working.” The remainder were classified as “likely working” (n=4,121 [51.2%]) or “not working” (n=1,443 [17.9%]) using death certificate and case registry data. MeasurementsWe calculated age-adjusted overall and occupation-specific COVID-19 mortality rates using 2019 American Community Survey denominators. ResultsConfirmed and likely working COVID-19 decedents were predominantly male (76.3%), Latino (68.7%), and foreign-born (59.6%), with high school or less education (67.9%); 7.8% were Black. The overall age-adjusted COVID-19 mortality rate was 30.0 per 100,000 workers (95% confidence interval [CI], 29.3-30.8). Workers in nine occupational groups had mortality rates higher than this overall rate, including those in farming (78.0; 95% CI, 68.7-88.2); material moving (77.8; 95% CI, 70.2-85.9); construction (62.4; 95% CI, 57.7-67.4); production (60.2; 95% CI, 55.7-65.0); and transportation (57.2; 95% CI, 52.2-62.5) occupations. While occupational differences in mortality were evident across demographic groups, mortality rates were three-fold higher for male compared with female workers and three- to seven-fold higher for Latino and Black workers compared with Asian and White workers. LimitationsThe requirement that fatalities be laboratory-confirmed and the use of 2019 denominator data may underestimate the occupational burden of COVID-19 mortality. ConclusionCalifornians in manual labor and in-person service occupations experienced disproportionate COVID-19 mortality, with the highest rates observed among male, Latino, and Black workers.
Nguyen Alyssa、Frederick Matthew、Snyder Robert、Chan Elena、Murray Erin L.、Harrison Robert、Jain Seema、Rodriguez Andrea、Vergara Ximena、Beckman John、Wong Jessie、Gibb Kathryn、Cummings Kristin J.
Infectious Diseases Branch, California Department of Public HealthOccupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health||Public Health InstituteInfectious Diseases Branch, California Department of Public HealthOccupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health||Public Health InstituteImmunization Branch, California Department of Public HealthOccupational Health Branch, California Department of Public HealthInfectious Diseases Branch, California Department of Public HealthOccupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health||Public Health InstituteOccupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health||Heluna HealthOccupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health||Public Health InstituteOccupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health||Public Health InstituteOccupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health||Public Health InstituteOccupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health
医学现状、医学发展医学研究方法预防医学
Nguyen Alyssa,Frederick Matthew,Snyder Robert,Chan Elena,Murray Erin L.,Harrison Robert,Jain Seema,Rodriguez Andrea,Vergara Ximena,Beckman John,Wong Jessie,Gibb Kathryn,Cummings Kristin J..Disparities in COVID-19 Fatalities among Working Californians[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-04-29].https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.11.10.21266195.点此复制
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