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Erschienen in: Journal of Public Health 2/2024

06.01.2023 | COVID-19 | Original Article

An exploration of structural determinants driving racial disparities in COVID-19 deaths in Michigan

verfasst von: Emily K. Clark, Erin N. Voichoski, Alexa K. Eisenberg, Roshanak Mehdipanah

Erschienen in: Journal of Public Health | Ausgabe 2/2024

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Abstract

Aim

Racial disparities in COVID-19 death rates have largely been driven by structural racism in health, housing, and labor systems that place Black, Brown, and Indigenous populations at greater risk for COVID-19 exposure, transmission, and severe illness, compared to non-Hispanic White populations. Here we examine the association between taxable property values per capita, an indicator influenced by historical and contemporary housing policies that have disproportionately impacted people of color, and COVID-19 deaths.

Methods

Taxable values serve as a proxy for fiscal health providing insight on the county’s ability to address imminent needs, including COVID-19 responses. Therefore, higher taxable values indicate local governments that are better equipped to deliver these public services. We used county-level data from the American Community Survey, the Michigan Community Financial Dashboard, The Atlantic’s COVID Tracking Project, and the Community Health Rankings and Roadmap for this cross-sectional study. Maps were created to examine the geographic distribution of cumulative death rates and taxable values per capita, and regression models were used to examine the association between the two while controlling for population density, age, education, race, income, obesity, diabetes, and smoking rates.

Results

Seventy-five counties were included. The mean taxable value per capita was $43,764.50 and the mean cumulative death rate was 171.86. Findings from the regression analysis showed that counties with higher taxable values were associated with lower COVID-19 death rates (B = –2.45, P < 0.001)

Conclusion

Our findings reveal a need to reevaluate current policies surrounding taxable property values in the state of Michigan, not solely for their inequitable impact on local governments' financial solvency and service quality, but also for their negative consequences for population health and racial health equity.
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Metadaten
Titel
An exploration of structural determinants driving racial disparities in COVID-19 deaths in Michigan
verfasst von
Emily K. Clark
Erin N. Voichoski
Alexa K. Eisenberg
Roshanak Mehdipanah
Publikationsdatum
06.01.2023
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Schlagwort
COVID-19
Erschienen in
Journal of Public Health / Ausgabe 2/2024
Print ISSN: 2198-1833
Elektronische ISSN: 1613-2238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10389-022-01817-w

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