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首页|COVID-19, a social disease in Paris: a socio-economic wide association study on hospitalized patients highlights low-income neighbourhood as a key determinant of severe COVID-19 incidence during the first wave of the epidemic

COVID-19, a social disease in Paris: a socio-economic wide association study on hospitalized patients highlights low-income neighbourhood as a key determinant of severe COVID-19 incidence during the first wave of the epidemic

COVID-19, a social disease in Paris: a socio-economic wide association study on hospitalized patients highlights low-income neighbourhood as a key determinant of severe COVID-19 incidence during the first wave of the epidemic

来源:medRxiv_logomedRxiv
英文摘要

Abstract BackgroundStudies have already shown that many environmental factors are associated with COVID-19 incidence. However, none have studied a very large set of socio-economic indicators and analysed to what extent these factors could highlight populations at high risk for COVID-19. We propose here a new approach, a socio-economic wide study, to pinpoint subgroups with a high incidence of COVID-19, and illustrated this approach using hospitalized cases in Paris area. MethodsWe extracted 303 socio-economic indicators from French census data for the 855 residential units in Paris and assessed their association with COVID-19 hospitalization risk. We then fitted a predictive model using a penalized regression on these indicators to predict the incidence of patient hospitalization for COVID-19 in Paris. FindingsThe most associated indicator was income, corresponding to the 3rd decile of the population (OR= 0.11, CI95% [0.05; 0.20]). A model including only income achieves a high performance in both the training set (AUC=0.78, CI95%: 0.72-0.85) and the test set (AUC=0.79 (CI95%: 0.71-0.87). Overall, the 45% most deprived areas gathered 86% of the areas with a high incidence of COVID-19 hospitalized cases. InterpretationDuring the first wave of the epidemic, income predicted Paris areas at risk for a high incidence of patients hospitalized for COVID-19 with a high performance. Socio-economic wide association studies, collecting passively data from hospitalized cases, therefore not necessitating any effort for health caregivers, is of particular interest in such a period of hospital overcrowding as it provides real-time indirect information on populations having high COVID-19 incidence.

Rance Bastien、Jannot Anne-Sophie、Burgun Anita、Katsahian Sandrine、Coutouris Hector

Universit¨| de Paris||Assistance Publique-H?pitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Service d?ˉinformatique m¨|dicale, biostatistiques et sant¨| publique, H?pital Europ¨|en Georges Pompidou||Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Sorbonne Universit¨|, Inserm, Universit¨| de ParisUniversit¨| de Paris||Assistance Publique-H?pitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Service d?ˉinformatique m¨|dicale, biostatistiques et sant¨| publique, H?pital Europ¨|en Georges Pompidou||Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Sorbonne Universit¨|, Inserm, Universit¨| de ParisUniversit¨| de Paris||Assistance Publique-H?pitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Service d?ˉinformatique m¨|dicale, biostatistiques et sant¨| publique, H?pital Europ¨|en Georges Pompidou||Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Sorbonne Universit¨|, Inserm, Universit¨| de ParisUniversit¨| de Paris||Assistance Publique-H?pitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Service d?ˉinformatique m¨|dicale, biostatistiques et sant¨| publique, H?pital Europ¨|en Georges Pompidou||Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Sorbonne Universit¨|, Inserm, Universit¨| de ParisUniversit¨| de Paris||Assistance Publique-H?pitaux de Paris (AP-HP), Service d?ˉinformatique m¨|dicale, biostatistiques et sant¨| publique, H?pital Europ¨|en Georges Pompidou||Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Sorbonne Universit¨|, Inserm, Universit¨| de Paris

10.1101/2020.10.30.20222901

医学研究方法预防医学医药卫生理论

clinical datawarehouseecological studysocio-economic risk factorsmachine learning

Rance Bastien,Jannot Anne-Sophie,Burgun Anita,Katsahian Sandrine,Coutouris Hector.COVID-19, a social disease in Paris: a socio-economic wide association study on hospitalized patients highlights low-income neighbourhood as a key determinant of severe COVID-19 incidence during the first wave of the epidemic[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-04-29].https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.10.30.20222901.点此复制

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