Racial/ethnic disparities in exposure to COVID-19, susceptibility to COVID-19 and access to health care – findings from a U.S. national cohort

We examined the influence of racial/ethnic differences in socioeconomic position on COVID-19 seroconversion and hospitalization within a community-based prospective cohort enrolled in March 2020 and followed through October 2021 (N=6740). The ability to social distance as a measure of exposure to COVID-19, susceptibility to COVID-19 complications, and access to healthcare varied by race/ethnicity with non-white participants having more exposure risk and more difficulty with healthcare access than white participants. Participants with more (versus less) exposure had greater odds of seroconversion (aOR:1.64, 95% Confidence Interval [CI] 1.18–2.29). Participants with more susceptibility and more barriers to healthcare had greater odds of hospitalization (respective aOR:2.36; 1.90–2.96 and 2.31; 1.69–2.68). Race/ethnicity positively modified the association between susceptibility and hospitalization (aORnon-White:2.79, 2.06–3.78). Findings may explain the disproportionate burden of COVID-19 infections and complications among Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black persons. Primary and secondary prevention efforts should address disparities in exposure, COVID-19 vaccination, and treatment.


INTRODUCTION
For structural measures of exposure (Table 2), a greater proportion of Hispanic, Black NH and API NH participants lived in an urban area and lived in a multi-unit dwelling compared to White NH participants. A greater proportion of Hispanic and Black NH participants were unable to avoid public transportation compared to API NH and White NH participants. For work-related measures, the proportion of participants with less ability to social distance was generally highest among Black NH participants and lowest among White NH participants. A greater proportion of Black NH than White NH participants who were employed reported that they were unable to work from home and could lose their job if unable to go to work. All differences were statistically significant (p<0.001). The proportion with more exposure risk was highest among Black NH (51%) and Hispanic (46%) and lowest among API NH (36%) and White NH participants (33%) (p<0.001).
White participants. In contrast, there was no evidence of EMM by race/ethnicity for the COVID-19 exposure or health care access indices with hospitalization (Table 4).

DISCUSSION
Our study confirms the existence of significant racial and ethnic differences in potential COVID-19 exposure risk, susceptibility to COVID-19 complications, and access to health care within a large U.S. national cohort. The proportion with more exposure risk and more difficulty with healthcare access was significantly higher among Black NH, Hispanic and API NH than White NH participants. More exposure, as measured by reduced ability to social distance, increased the odds of seroconversion by 64% and hospitalization by 73%. More underlying susceptibility and more difficulty with access to care increased the odds of hospitalization by 113-136%.
Many have hypothesized that SEP influences the differential impact of the COVID-19 pandemic either directly or indirectly via occupation, living and working conditions, healthrelated behaviors, presence of comorbidities and immune functioning.(8,11,12) However, the influence of SEP on COVID-19 transmission, severity and outcomes is understudied, and existing research has largely characterized SEP using geography and race/ethnicity as a proxies.(21-27) For example, U.S. counties with a higher proportion of Black or Hispanic population or of adults with less than a high school diploma had disproportionately higher COVID-19 cases. (26) Using data from the American Community Survey to characterize socioeconomic vulnerability at the neighborhood level, ecologic analyses have demonstrated that increasing levels of socioeconomic vulnerability were associated with gaps in COVID-19 testing coverage in Massachusetts and COVID-19 mortality in Chicago. (21,27) Although useful, such approaches may mask the extent of inequity and the influence of SEP at the individual-level. We . CC-BY 4.0 International license It is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity.

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are aware of one study that included individual-level social indicators to assess  outcomes.(28) Hispanic ethnicity, inability to shelter in place and maintain income, frontline service work, unemployment, and household income <$50,000 increased the risk of COVID-19 infection among residents and workers located in small community within San Francisco. (28) We provide empirical evidence to support the conceptual model of Blumenshine, et al, in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.(12) Differences in SEP contribute to disparities in exposure, susceptibility to illness given infection, and timely access to care and supportive treatment. Further, reduced ability to social distance was positively associated with seroconversion and hospitalization, and increased susceptibility to COVID-19 complications and poor access to healthcare were positively associated with hospitalization. We did not observe an association between seroconversion with susceptibility or access to care. The null finding is unsurprising given susceptibility to complications and access to care would be expected to influence illness following infection. Primary and secondary prevention efforts should address potential social disparities in exposure, COVID-19 vaccination, and access to care/treatment.
Our finding that Hispanic and Black NH participants had more exposure and more difficulty with healthcare access than White NH participants is consistent with other research showing a disproportionate burden of COVID-19 infections, complications and mortality on racial and ethnic minorities. (3,5,8,23,(29)(30)(31)(32)(33)(34)(35) The positive additive interaction observed between racial and ethnic minority group status and susceptibility to severe COVID-19 disease with hospitalization is especially concerning. We did not observe evidence of EMM by race/ethnicity in terms of the COVID exposure index or the healthcare access index. The implication of these findings is that non-White populations should be prioritized in efforts to reduce susceptibility, whereas interventions to reduce COVID exposure (i.e., social distancing ability) and healthcare . CC-BY 4.0 International license It is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. (which was not certified by peer review) access should target everyone. Recommendations for and discussions about social distancing fail to account for the reality of differential ability to adopt and benefit from these approaches, creating inequities in health outcomes. Long-standing health disparities contribute to susceptibility among Hispanic and Black NH individuals and susceptibility is also influenced by lower healthcare access. Mitigation strategies and messaging should intensify focus on Hispanic and Black NH individuals with conditions that increase risk of COVID-19 morbidity and mortality and incorporate targeted, culturally appropriate communication.
As with all observational studies, confounding of the exposure-outcome relationship is a concern, and we did not address the possibility of joint effects of the SEP indices. All exposure data was collected at cohort enrollment. The benefit of using enrollment data for exposure measurement is that all participants had to complete the screening tool to enroll into prospective follow-up. Thus, missing data was minimized. Measurement error may be a concern given data on hospitalizations was self-reported.
There have been increasing calls for research to better capture and report on socioeconomic determinants of COVID-19 outcomes alongside race/ethnicity to identify populations that may experience a disproportionate burden of risk and/or ability to benefit from pandemic mitigation strategies.(10,13) We observed significant racial/ethnic disparities in ability to social distance as a measure of COVID exposure, susceptibility to COVID-19 complications and access to healthcare in our national cohort. To the best of our knowledge, we present some of the first data, measured at the individual level, to demonstrate racial/ethnic differences in these factors and their association with seroconversion and hospitalization. Future pandemic mitigation strategies should account for the inequities in burden that can be introduced via SEP in relation to pathogen exposure, susceptibility, and health care access.
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The copyright holder for this preprint this version posted January 12, 2022.  M  e  a  s  u  r  e  s  o  f  E  x  p  o  s  u  r  e  :  I  n  a  b  i  l  i  t  y  t  o  I  m  p  o  s  e  S  o  c  i  a  l  D  i  s  t  a  n  c  e   S  t  r  u  c  t  u  r  a  l  m  e  a  s  u  r  e  s   L  i  v  i  n  g  i  n  a  n  u  r  b  a  n  a  r  e  a  1 ,  is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity.

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