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Underreporting of race/ethnicity in COVID-19 research

机译:Covid-19研究中的种族/种族的报告

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Objectives Although racial/ethnic disparities in healthcare have long been recognized, recent discourse around structural racism will hopefully lead to improved transparency surrounding these issues. Despite the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on racial/ethnic minorities, the extent and reliability of race reporting in COVID research is unclear. Methods COVID-19 research published in three top medical journals during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic was reviewed and assessed for race reporting and proportional representation. Results Of the 95 manuscripts that were identified, 56 reporting on 252,262 patients met eligibility. Thirty-five (62.5%) did not report race distribution and 15 (26.7%) did not report ethnicity. There was no difference based on journal (P = 0.87), study sponsor (P = 0.41), whether the study was retrospective or prospective (P = 0.33), or observational vs interventional (P = 0.11). Studies with ≥250 patients were more likely to report on race (OR 4.01, 95% CI: 1.12–14.37, P = 0.027), and North American (USA and Canada) studies were more likely than European studies (OR 7.88, 95% CI: 1.73–37.68, P = 0.006) to report on race. COVID-19 research mirrored USA COVID-19 racial incidence; however, both showed higher distribution of COVID-19 infection among Blacks and a smaller proportion of Whites compared to the USA population. This suggests that research is broadly representing infection rates and that social determinants of health are impacting racial distribution of infection. Conclusions Despite increasing awareness of racial disparities and inequity, COVID-19 research during the first wave of the pandemic lacked appropriate racial/ethnicity reporting. However, research mirrored COVID-19 incidence in the USA, with an increased burden of infection among Black individuals.
机译:目标虽然医疗保健的种族/民族差异长期以来一直被认可,但最近围绕结构种族主义的话语有望导致围绕这些问题的透明度。尽管Covid-19对种族/少数民族的影响不成比例,但Covid研究中的种族报告的程度和可靠性尚不清楚。方法审查并评估了在Covid-19大流行病的第一批浪潮中发表的Covid-19研究,并评估了种族报告和比例代表。确定的95个稿件的结果56例报告252,262名患者达到了资格。三十五(62.5%)没有报告种族分布,15名(26.7%)没有报告种族。基于杂志的差异(p = 0.87),研究赞助商(p = 0.41),是否研究是回顾性或前瞻性的(p = 0.33),或观察到vs介入(p = 0.11)。 ≥250名患者的研究更有可能报告种族(或4.01,95%CI:1.12-14.37,P = 0.027),而北美(美国和加拿大)研究比欧洲研究更可能(或7.88,95% CI:1.73-37.68,p = 0.006)报告种族。 Covid-19研究镜像美国Covid-19种族发病率;然而,与美国人口相比,黑人中的Covid-19感染和较小的白人比例均显示出更高的Covid-19感染。这表明研究大致代表了感染率,健康的社会决定因素正在影响感染的种族分布。结论尽管对种族差异和不公平的意识提高了认识,但在大流行的第一波浪潮中的Covid-19研究缺乏适当的种族/种族报告。然而,研究在美国的镜像Covid-19发病率,黑人感染负担增加。

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