Important update: Healthcare facilities
CDC has updated select ways to operate healthcare systems effectively in response to COVID-19 vaccination. Learn more
UPDATE
Given new evidence on the B.1.617.2 (Delta) variant, CDC has updated the guidance for fully vaccinated people. CDC recommends universal indoor masking for all teachers, staff, students, and visitors to K-12 schools, regardless of vaccination status. Children should return to full-time in-person learning in the fall with layered prevention strategies in place.
UPDATE
The White House announced that vaccines will be required for international travelers coming into the United States, with an effective date of November 8, 2021. For purposes of entry into the United States, vaccines accepted will include FDA approved or authorized and WHO Emergency Use Listing vaccines. More information is available here.
UPDATE
Travel requirements to enter the United States are changing, starting November 8, 2021. More information is available here.

Risk of Exposure to COVID-19

Risk of Exposure to COVID-19

Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities

Updated Dec. 10, 2020
Why are some racial and ethnic minority groups disproportionately affected by COVID-19? The following links provide specific information about underlying health and social inequities that put many racial and ethnic minority groups at increased risk of getting sick, having more severe illness, and dying from COVID-19.

Conditions in the places where people live, learn, work, play, and worship affect a wide range of health risks and outcomes, such as COVID-19 infection, severe illness, and death. These conditions are known as social determinants of health.

Social determinants of health that may influence risk of exposure to COVID-19 include neighborhood and physical environment, housing, occupation, education, and economic stability. Discrimination, which includes racism, shapes the social and economic factors that put people at increased risk for COVID-19 infection.1,2,3,4,5 Unfortunately, discrimination exists in systems meant to protect well-being and health, such as housing, education, criminal justice, and finance.

Evidence for risk of exposure to COVID-19

COVID-19 is a new disease. A growing number of studies describe the factors that increase risk of exposure to COVID-19. Researchers have reported differences between racial and ethnic groups in the underlying factors that may increase risk of exposure. Some of the studies are from the entire United States; others are from specific cities and communities. Both types of studies consistently identify similar social factors associated with increased risk of exposure and COVID-19 illness. CDC will continue to monitor the latest evidence and provide updated information here.

Current evidence shows that the following factors are associated with increased risk of exposure to COVID-19.  These factors disproportionately affect racial and ethnic minority groups:

  • Neighborhood and physical environment: There is evidence that people in racial and ethnic minority groups are more likely to live in areas with high rates of new COVID-19 infections (incidence).2,6 Locally, the social factors associated with higher rates of new COVID-19 infections may vary between counties. One study found that local population-level factors related to racial and ethnic minority status, language spoken, housing, transportation, household composition and disability were associated with higher rates of new COVID-19 infections.7 These findings further support potential links between local social factors and COVID-19.
    Another study found that geographic areas with higher social and economic inequities, indicating more deprived areas, had higher rates of infection compared with areas with lower social and economic inequities. Additionally, high-deprivation areas had higher proportions of Hispanic and non-White residents, persons working in manual, essential, and public-facing sectors, more crowded housing, and food and health care insecurity.6
  • Housing: Crowded living conditions and unstable housing contribute to transmission of infectious diseases and can hinder COVID-19 prevention strategies like hygiene measures, self-isolation, or self-quarantine. Increasingly disproportionate unemployment rates for some racial and ethnic minority groups during the COVID-19 pandemic8 may lead to greater risk of eviction and homelessness or sharing housing. In some cultures, it is common for family members of many generations to live in one household. A previous report found that a higher percent of people from racial and ethnic minority groups lived in crowded housing (such as more than one person per room) compared to non-Hispanic White people.9 Among people with COVID-19, people in racial and ethnic minority groups were more likely to live in areas with higher population density and more housing units or inadequate housing (such as lack of indoor plumbing).10,11
    COVID-19 outbreaks have been reported in settings such as correctional facilities, homeless shelters, and long-term care facilities, often referred to as shared and congregate housing. 12,13,14,15,16 Racial and ethnic minority groups are disproportionately represented in many of these settings.17,18 There are challenges in controlling the spread of COVID-19 in shared and congregate housing because of crowded, shared environments, increased potential introductions by staff members and new residents, and difficulty following distancing and hygiene measures.
  • Occupation: Racial and ethnic minority groups are disproportionately represented in essential work settings such as healthcare facilities, farms, factories, warehouses, food processing, accommodation and food services, retail services, grocery stores, and public transportation.19,20,21,22 Some people who work in these settings have more chances to be exposed to COVID-19 because of several factors. These include close contact with the public or other workers, not being able to work from home, and needing to work when sick because they do not have paid sick days.23
    Another study looked at differences in employment-related risk of infection by race and ethnicity to better understand racial and ethnic disparities in COVID-19-associated hospitalizations. The authors found that non-Hispanic Black adults were 60% more likely than non-Hispanic White adults to live in households with healthcare workers. The authors of the study also determined that a higher percentage of Hispanic or Latino adults (64.5%) lived in households with at least one worker who was unable to work from home (compared with 56.5% among non-Hispanic Black adults and 46.6% among non-Hispanic White adults).24
Infographic: During April-May 2020, 16,233 workers in meat and poultry processing facilities were infected with COVID-19

Data source: MMWR

During April-May 2020, 16,233 workers in meat and poultry processing facilities were infected with COVID-19. Among infected workers with reported race and ethnicity, 87% were racial or ethnic minorities*.

Meat and poultry processing facilities should:

  • Provide culturally appropriate health education materials
  • Screen workers for possible infection
  • Encourage hand hygiene and use of face coverings
  • Increase space between workers
  • Encourage workers to take sick leave when needed

*Race/ethnicity reported for 61% of cases

  • Education, income, and wealth gaps: Inequities in access to high-quality education can lead to lower high school completion rates and barriers to college entrance. This may limit future job options and lead to lower paying or less stable jobs. People with limited job options likely have less flexibility to leave jobs that may put them at higher risk of exposure to COVID-19.
    Recent studies consistently found that non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic or Latino participants had lower levels of COVID-19-related knowledge about personal prevention practices, symptoms, and when to seek care, yet were more worried about and experienced more negative effects related to COVID-19.25,26,27 Additionally, one study found that among pregnant people with confirmed COVID-19, Hispanic or Latino people were more likely than non-Hispanic people to have lower incomes and public insurance.28

Access to testing

Social determinants of health may also influence access to testing. One study found that the median travel time to a COVID-19 testing site was 20 minutes in April 2020. Counties with a travel time of more than 20 minutes to a COVID-19 testing site had a higher percentage of the population that were from racial and ethnic minority groups, were uninsured, and had lower population density (were rural).29 While access to testing may have improved since April, differences in travel time may still limit access to, and use of, testing services for those who have limited access to transportation and who live in areas with fewer public transit services and schedules. Other factors that may affect both access to, and use of, testing services include lack of health insurance, concern about the costs or co-pays, occupational factors such as not being able to take time off of work and lack of paid leave, lack of accessible options for people with disabilities, and distrust of the government and healthcare systems.23,30,31,32 Delays in testing may also delay seeking care when sick as well as delays in self-isolation or implementing other mitigation measures that could reduce the spread of the virus to others.

To stop the spread of COVID-19, we need to work together to address the inequities in the social determinants of health that increase risk of exposure to COVID-19 for racial and ethnic minority groups. Learn more about what we can do to move towards health equity.

More Information
References
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