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[Preprint]. 2020 Jun 23:2020.05.21.20109116. Originally published 2020 May 23. [Version 2] doi: 10.1101/2020.05.21.20109116

Improved measurement of racial/ethnic disparities in COVID-19 mortality in the United States

Joshua Robert Goldstein, Serge Atherwood
PMCID: PMC7274238  PMID: 32511557

Abstract

Different estimation methods produce diverging accounts of racial/ethnic disparities in COVID-19 mortality in the United States. The CDC's decision to present the racial/ethnic distribution of COVID-19 deaths at the state level alongside re-weighted racial/ethnic population distributions -- in effect, a geographic adjustment -- makes it seem that Whites have the highest death rates. Age adjustment procedures used by others, including the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, lead to the opposite conclusion that Blacks and Hispanics are dying from COVID-19 at higher rates than Whites. In this paper, we use indirect standardization methods to adjust per-capita death rates for both age and geography simultaneously, avoiding the one-sided adjustment procedures currently in use. Using CDC data, we find age-and-place- adjusted COVID-19 death rates are 80% higher for Blacks and more than 50% higher for Hispanics, relative to Whites, on a national level, while there is almost no disparity for Asians. State-specific estimates show wide variation in mortality disparities. Comparison with non- epidemic mortality reveals potential roles for pre-existing health disparities and differential rates of infection and care.

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