2022 年 6 月至 10 月各州和大都会区美国成年人中长 COVID-19 和相关症状的差异

Gopal K. Singh, Hyunjung Lee, Lyoung Hee Kim, R. Azuine
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:关于长期 COVID(定义为持续 3 个月或更长时间的 COVID-19 症状)的社会人口和地域不平等现象的研究很少。利用最新的全国代表性数据,我们研究了美国 18 岁以上成年人中长 COVID 和严重 COVID 症状流行率的地域差异。方法:我们分析了美国人口普查局 2022 年 6 月 1 日至 10 月 17 日连续五轮的家庭脉搏调查(N=108,064)。利用多变量逻辑回归和健康差异指数,我们模拟了各州和大都会地区在长 COVID 和严重 COVID 症状方面的差异,同时控制了种族/人种、社会经济地位、医疗保险和其他人口特征。结果:2022 年 6 月至 10 月期间,美国约有 3540 万 COVID 患者(占 32.2%)报告出现长 COVID;1520 万 COVID 患者(占 13.8%)报告出现严重 COVID 症状。长COVID的患病率从哥伦比亚特区(DC)的24.0%、夏威夷的25.4%到阿拉巴马州的39.2%、怀俄明州的39.9%和西弗吉尼亚州的43.6%不等。经协变因素调整后,阿拉巴马州、怀俄明州和西弗吉尼亚州确诊为 COVID-19 的成年人患长 COVID 的调整后几率比哥伦比亚特区的成年人高 48-178%。阿拉巴马州、阿肯色州、科罗拉多州、爱荷华州、肯塔基州、密西西比州、蒙大拿州、北达科他州、南达科他州、得克萨斯州、犹他州、弗吉尼亚州、怀俄明州和西弗吉尼亚州确诊为 COVID-19 的成人出现严重 COVID 症状的调整后几率是佛蒙特州同类人群的 2.0-2.5 倍。在美国 15 个最大的都市区中,长 COVID 和严重 COVID 症状的流行率存在巨大差异,长 COVID 的流行率从旧金山的 21.9% 到加利福尼亚河滨市的 38.0% 不等。社会经济、人口和医疗保险特征解释了州一级长COVID患病率差异的34%和大都会地区长COVID患病率差异的45%。结论及对翻译的启示:存在明显的地域差异,东南部、西南部和北部平原州的 COVID 患者/幸存者罹患长 COVID 和出现严重 COVID 症状的风险要高得多。长COVID患者公平获得护理和支持服务对于减少COVID相关健康结果的不平等至关重要。 Copyright © 2023 Singh et al.本文是根据知识共享署名许可 CC BY 4.0 条款发布的开放获取文章。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
State and Metropolitan Area Disparities in Long COVID-19 and Related Symptoms among US Adults, June-October 2022
Background: Little research exists on sociodemographic and geographic inequalities in Long COVID, defined as COVID-19 symptoms lasting 3 months or longer. Using the latest nationally representative data, we examine geographic disparities in prevalence of Long COVID and severe COVID symptoms among United States (US) adults aged ≥18 years. Methods: We analyzed five consecutive rounds of the US Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey from June 1 to October 17, 2022 (N=108,064). Using multivariable logistic regression and health disparity indices, we modeled disparities in Long COVID and severe COVID symptoms by state and metropolitan area, controlling for race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, health insurance, and other demographic characteristics. Results: During June–October 2022, an estimated 35.4 million or 32.2% of COVID patients in the US reported developing Long COVID; and 15.2 million or 13.8% of COVID patients reported experiencing severe COVID symptoms. The prevalence of Long COVID ranged from 24.0% in the District of Columbia (DC), 25.4% in Hawaii to 39.2% in Alabama, 39.9% in Wyoming, and 43.6% in West Virginia. Adjusted for covariates, adults with COVID-19 diagnosis in Alabama, Wyoming, and West Virginia had 48-178% higher adjusted odds of developing Long COVID than their counterparts in DC. Adults with COVID-19 diagnosis in Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Kentucky, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota,Texas, Utah, Virginia, Wyoming, and West Virginia had 2.0-2.5 times higher adjusted odds of experiencing severe COVID symptoms than their counterparts in Vermont. Large disparities in prevalence of Long COVID and severe COVID symptoms existed among the 15 largest metropolitan areas of the US, with the prevalence of Long COVID ranging from 21.9% in San Francisco to 38.0% in Riverside, California. Socioeconomic, demographic and health insurance characteristics explained 34% of the state-level disparity and 45% of the metropolitan-area disparity in Long COVID prevalence. Conclusion and Implications for Translation: Marked geographic disparities existed, with COVID patients/survivors in the Southeast, Southwest, and Northern Plains states being at substantially higher risks of developing Long COVID and severe COVID symptoms. Equitable access to care and support services among patients with Long COVID is critical to reducing inequities in COVID-related healthoutcomes.   Copyright © 2023 Singh et al. Published by Global Health and Education Projects, Inc. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License CC BY 4.0.
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