Ethnic and regional variations in hospital mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: a cross-sectional observational study
Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo · The Alan Turing Institute · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Brazil ranks second worldwide in total number of COVID-19 cases and deaths. Understanding the possible socioeconomic and ethnic health inequities is particularly important given the diverse population and fragile political and economic situation. We aimed to characterise the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil and assess variations in mortality according to region, ethnicity, comorbidities, and symptoms.
We conducted a cross-sectional observational study of COVID-19 hospital mortality using data from the SIVEP-Gripe (Sistema de Informação de Vigilância Epidemiológica da Gripe) dataset to characterise the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil. In the study, we included hospitalised patients who had a positive RT-PCR test for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 and who had ethnicity information in the dataset. Ethnicity of participants was classified according to the five categories used by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics: Branco (White), Preto (Black), Amarelo (East Asian), Indígeno (Indigenous), or Pardo (mixed ethnicity). We assessed regional variations in patients with COVID-19 admitted to hospital by state and by two socioeconomically grouped regions (north and central-south). We used mixed-effects Cox regression survival analysis to estimate the effects of ethnicity and comorbidity at an individual level in the context of regional variation.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 47.85
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 22
Authors
5- POP. O. Baqui
Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo
- IBIoana Bica
The Alan Turing Institute, University of Oxford
- VMValerio MarraCorresponding
Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo
- AEAri Ercole
University of Cambridge
- MVMihaela van der Schaar
The Alan Turing Institute, University of Cambridge, University of California, Los Angeles
Topics & keywords
- Ethnic group
- Demography
- Pandemic
- Context (archaeology)
- Socioeconomic status
- Cross-sectional study
- Observational study
- Medicine
- Good health and well-being