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. 2021 Apr 22;3:100041. doi: 10.1016/j.jmh.2021.100041

Table 1.

Data sources included in primary outcomes data, clinical outcomes (cases, hospitalisations, deaths).

Authors* Location Population Study design Publication type Study period Sample size Methods Key results Quality appraisal score (%)
COVID-19 cases
Guttman (Guttmann et al., 2020) Ontario, Canada Migrants and refugees Population-based case/ testing data Grey To 13 June 624,386 tested Rates of COVID-19 testing and percentage positivity in migrants, and relationship with socioeconomic factors Migrants accounted for 43.5% of all COVID-19 cases but make up just over 25% of the population; migrants had lower rates of testing but a higher percentage positivity in those tested (refugees 10.4% positive, other migrants 7.6%, and Canadian-born 2.6%) 6/10 (60)
Sundaram (Sundaram et al., 2020) Ontario, Canada Migrants Spatial comparison Pre-print 1 March to 20 June 25,050 diagnoses Association between COVID-19 diagnosis and percentage of migrants by area Living in an area with a greater percentage of immigrants was positively associated with rate of COVID-19 diagnosis 8/8 (100)
Kim (Kim et al., 2020) Washington DC, USA Non-English speakers Case/testing data Peer-reviewed publication 29 February to 31 May 562,242 tested Rates of COVID-19 testing and percentage positivity in non-English speakers versus English speakers Non-English speakers were tested less frequently for COVID-19 (4.7% vs 5.6%) but were more likely to receive a positive result (18.6% vs 4.0%) 6/8 (75)
Norweigan Institute of Public Health (Norweigan Institute of Public Health [Folkehelseinstituttet] 2020a) Norway Migrants Population-based case data National statistics To 4 May 7,847 cases Percentage of reported cases that are among the foreign-born Migrants made up 19% of reported cases in week 12 and 42% in week 18 N/A
Norweigan Institute of Public Health (Norweigan Institute of Public Health [Folkehelseinstituttet] 2020b) Norway Migrants Population-based case data National statistics To 5 Nov - Incidence rate among migrants by country of origin versus those born in Norway Until 1 July, incidence among the Somali-born was very high, but in autumn the risk increased for migrants from Pakistan, Iraq, Afghanistan, Serbia and Turkey N/A
Swedish Public Health Agency (Swedish Public Health Agency (Folkhälsomyndigheten) 2020) Sweden Migrants Population-based case data National statistics 13 March to 7 May - Incidence of COVID-19 by country of birth 32% of cases were immigrants, despite making up 19% of the population; highest incidence among those born in Turkey, Ethiopia, and Somalia N/A
Statens Serum Institut (Statens Serum Institut 2020) Denmark Migrants and their children Population-based case data National statistics 29 April to 6 May - Case, testing and incidence data, comparing migrants and their descendants with non-migrants Non-Western migrants and their native-born children accounted for 18% of cases, despite making up 9% of the population N/A
Statens Serum Institut (Statens Serum Institut 2020) Denmark Migrants and their children Population-based data on cases, hospitalisation and mortality National statistics 29 April to 7 September - Case, testing incidence, hospitalisation and mortality data, comparing migrants and their descendants with non-migrants Non-Western migrants and their native-born children accounted for 26% of cases, and 15% of COVID-19 hospital admissions, despite making up 9% of the population N/A
Guijarro (Guijarro et al., 2020) Alcorcón, Spain Migrants Population-based cohort study Pre-print 1 February to 25 April 152,018 residents Incidence of COVID-19 in migrants versus Spaniards and relative risk by region of origin Crude incidence of COVID-19 among migrants was higher than among Spaniards, at 8.71 and 6.51 per 1000 inhabitants respectively (p<0.001) 8/8 (100)
Grilli (Grilli et al., 2020) Reggio Emilia, Italy Migrants Population-based case data Peer-reviewed publication 6 March to 26 March 2635 tested Odds of COVID-19 infection and being tested in migrants versus Italians Immigrants and Italians had a similar prevalence of infection (OR 0.99, 95% CI 0.82-1.20) and similar probability of being tested (OR 0.93, 95% CI 0.81-1.10) N/A
Strully (Strully et al., 2020) USA Migrants Spatial comparison Peer-reviewed publication To 28 May - Association of proportion of migrants living in a region with COVID-19 case rates Percentage of foreign-born residents was positively associated with COVID-19 case rate (fully adjusted IRR = 1.106, 95% CI 1.074-1.139, p<0.01) at county level 8/8 (100)
Jaqueti Aroca (Jaqueti Aroca et al., 2020) Madrid, Spain Migrants Case/testing data Peer-reviewed publication To the second week of April 1,781 patients Percentage positivity among foreign-born versus Spaniards in hospitals No significant difference in percentage positivity between migrants and Spaniards (OR 1.08, 95% CI 0.95-1.24), but those from Latin America are at higher risk; only 12.5% of positive migrants were >65 years versus 56.9% Spaniards 8/10 (80)
Chew (Chew et al., 2020) Singapore Migrant workers Case/testing data and clinical evaluation Peer-reviewed publication 11 to 19 April 5,977 migrant workers Review of data from an outbreak investigation among migrant workers in a dormitory, including test positivity and clinical parameters 1832 of 5977 migrant workers were symptomatic, of which 1264 (69%) were positive for COVID-19, corresponding to 21% of the cohort 6/10 (60)
Alkhamis (Alkhamis et al., 2020) Kuwait Migrant workers Population-based case data Peer-reviewed journal 23 February to 7 May 5988 cases Modelling pandemic progression (spatiotemporal cluster analysis) in Kuwait citizens/ residents and migrant workers 78.8% of COVID-19 cases were in migrant workers, 40.1% of which were of Indian nationality; significant spreading events among migrant workers 6/10 (60)
Openshaw (Openshaw and Travassos, 2020) USA Migrants in detention centres Viewpoint (in Peer-reviewed publication To May - Reports COVID-19 cases at ICE detention centres Over 1200 confirmed COVID-19 cases across 52 facilities run by ICE 6/6 (100)
ECDC (European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control 2020) EU/EEA and UK Migrants in detention centres Report reporting cases Grey To June - Reports COVID-19 cases at detention centres in Europe Reported outbreaks in detention centres in Germany and Portugal 6/6 (100)
Ministry of Health (Ministry of Health Singapore 2020) Singapore Migrant workers Population-based case data National statistics 18 Nov 5,704,000 (population) Surveillance of new confirmed cases in the past 14 days, including proportion in dorm residents 54,502 (95.7%) of 58,135 all in-country cases of COVID-19 were in migrants residing in dormitories 2/10 (20)
Ministry of Health (Ministry of Health Saudi Arabia 7 May 2020) Saudi Arabia Migrants Population-based case data National statistics To 7 May - Routine surveillance 75% of all people in-country who have tested positive for COVID-19 were migrants N/A
Greek Ministry of Health (Greek Ministry of Health 2020) Greece Migrants and refugees Hospital-based case data National statistics To 16 September - Routine surveillance Almost half of COVID-19 patients hospitalised in Attica are refugees from camps/hosting sites or destitute migrants N/A
Buda (Buda et al., 2020) Germany Refugees Outbreaks case data National statistics To 11 August - Collation of outbreak reports, assessing the proportion in refugee centres (vs other settings such as nursing homes) 2.5% of notified outbreaks (199 of 7864) were reported in refugee centres, comprising 7.5% (n=4,146) of all notified cases during outbreaks (n=55,141) N/A
Bozorgmehr (Bozorgmehr et al., 2020) Germany Refugees in reception/ accommodation centres Outbreaks case data Grey To 22 May 9785 refugees Meta-analysis of media reports in Germany to identifypooled cumulative incidence rate in refugee reception/ accommodation centres Identified 42 outbreaks in 11 federal states, with 1769 confirmed cases; IR of 17.0% (95% CI 12.0 to 23.0, I2 = 98.3%) N/A
COVID-19 hospitalisation
Giorgi Rossi (Giorgi Rossi et al., 2020) Reggio Emilia, Italy Migrants Population-based cohort study Peer-reviewed publication 27 February to 2 April 2,653 tested COVID-19 incidence, hospitalisation and death in migrants versus Italians Immigrants had a higher risk of hospitalisation (HR 1.3, 95% CI 0.99-1.81) than Italians 7/10 (70)
Hamadah (Hamadah H and Behbehani, 2020) Kuwait Migrants Hospital-based cohort study Peer-reviewed publication 24 February to 20 April 1,123 patients Comparison of ICU admission, ARDS, pneumonia and mortality in migrants and non-migrants Migrants had increased odds of death or ICU admission (OR 2.14, 95% CI 1.12-4.32), ARDS (OR 2.44, 95%CI 1.23-5.09) and pneumonia (OR 2.24, 95% CI 1.27-4.12) 8/8 (100)
Fabiani (Fabiani et al., 2020) Italy Migrants Population-based clinical and mortality data Pre-print 20 Feb to 19 July 213,180 cases Comparison of case fatality rate and rate of admission to hospital and ICU between migrants versus Italians Non-Italian cases were diagnosed at a later date than Italian cases and were more likely to be hospitalised (ARR=1.39, 95% CI 1.33- 1.44) and admitted to an ICU (ARR=1.19, 95% CI 1.07-1.32) 8/8 (100)
COVID-19 mortality
Canevelli (Canevelli et al., 2020) Italy Migrants Temporal comparison Peer-reviewed publication 21 February to 29 April 2,687 deceased cases Comparison of proportion of migrants in COVID-19 deaths versus all-cause mortality in 2018 The proportion of migrants and non-migrants among COVID-related deaths (2.5% and 97.5% respectively) was similar to the estimated 2018 all-cause mortality rates (2.6% and 97.4%); but migrants were younger at the time of death versus non-migrants (71.1, SD 13.1 vs 78.3, SD 10.8, p<0.001) 9/10 (90)
Public Health England (Public Health England 2020) England Migrants Temporal comparison Grey 21 March to 8 May - Comparison of all-cause mortality in 2020 versus 2014-2018 in migrants and UK-born Deaths in 2020 were over 3 times higher than 2014-2018 for those from Central and Western Africa, the Caribbean, South East Asia, Middle East, and South and Eastern Africa, versus 1.7 times higher overall in England 8/8 (100)
Papon (Papon and Robert-Bobée, 2020) France Migrants Temporal comparison Grey March to April - Comparison of proportion of migrants in registered deaths in 2020 versus 2014-2019 The foreign-born represented 15% of registered deaths in March and April 2020 versus 13% in March and April 2019 6/10 (60)
Observatoire Regional de Sante Ile de France (Observatoire Regional de Sante Ile de France 2020) Paris, France Migrants Spatial comparison Grey March 2020 Not stated Mortality (daily deaths) by Parisian departments (areas) compared with sociodemographic characteristics of the department. Eg. Seine-Saint-Denis, a district in the north of Paris where 30% of the population is an immigrant, had a 188% mortality increase compared with 2019 versus a 96% increase in Paris as a whole 1/10 (10)
Kunst (Kunst et al., 2020) Netherlands Migrants and their children Temporal comparison National statistics March to April - Comparison of mortality in March-April versus in the preceding weeks, adjusted for seasonal factors, in migrants versus Dutch Mortality was 47% higher than expected for immigrants from non-Western countries and their children, 49% higher for immigrants from Western countries and their children, and 38% higher for the native-born with Dutch parents N/A
Hansson (Hansson et al., 2020) Sweden Migrants Temporal comparison Peer-reviewed publication February to May - Comparison of all-cause mortality in 2020 versus 2016-2019 by region of birth Among middle-aged (40-64 years) and older (>65 years) people born in Syria, Iraq and Somalia excess mortality was ~220%; among those born in Sweden, the EU, the Nordic countries or North America, excess mortality among those >65 was 19% and among the middle aged was 1% N/A
Calderón-Larrañaga (Calderón-Larrañaga et al., 2020) Stockholm, Sweden Migrants Spatial/ temporal comparison Peer-reviewed publication 6-12 April 2,379,792 residents Comparison of excess mortality compared with previous 5 years in areas according to share of migrants Areas with the lowest tercile share of Swedish-born had 178% excess mortality compared with the previous 5 years 6/10 (60)
Drefahl (Drefahl et al., 2020) Sweden Migrants Individual-level survival analysis Peer-reviewed publication To 7 May 1,189,484 py (17,181 deaths) Risk of death from COVID-19 in individual-level data according to migrant status and region of origin Immigrants from LMICs from the Middle East and North Africa showed increased mortality among men (HR 3.13, 95% CI 2.51-3.90) and women (HR 2.09, 95% CI 1.52-2.89) as compared to the Swedish-born 8/10 (80)
Rostila (Rostila et al., 2020) Stockholm, Sweden Migrants Population-based cohort study Grey 31 Jan to 4 May 1,778,670 individuals Risk of death from COVID-19 in individual-level data according to migrant status and region of origin Migrants from Middle Eastern countries (RR 3.2, 95% CI 2.6-3.8), Africa (RR 3.0, 95% CI 2.2-4.3) and the Nordic countries (RR 1.5, 95% CI 1.2-1.8) had higher COVID-19 mortality versus the Swedish-born 9/11 (82)
Centrum for epidemiologi och samhallsmediccin (Centrum for epidemiologi och samhallsmediccin RS 2020) Stockholm, Sweden Migrants Individual-level survival analysis Grey To 30 June - Risk of death from COVID-19 in individual-level data according to country of birth, among those aged 25 years and older Migrants from Somalia (HR 12.39, 95% CI 7.93-19.36), Lebanon (HR 6.19, 95% CI 3.41-11.24), and Syria (HR 6.14, 95% CI 4.28-8.80) show increased risk of death compared with Swedish-born, adjusted for age and sex N/A
Cook (Cook et al., 2020) UK Migrant healthcare workers (HCWs) Characterisation of reported HCW deaths Grey To 22 April 106 HCWs Proportion of UK healthcare workers who died who were born outside the UK Of 106 UK healthcare workers who died up until 22 April 2020, at least 56 (53%) were born outside the UK 4/10 (40)

*Where papers report on multiple outcomes (cases, hospitalisations, deaths) papers are included under the first relevant sub-heading only