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. 2020 Dec 29:6:2378023120980918.
doi: 10.1177/2378023120980918. eCollection 2020.

Racial Disparities in COVID-19 and Excess Mortality in Minnesota

Affiliations

Racial Disparities in COVID-19 and Excess Mortality in Minnesota

Elizabeth Wrigley-Field et al. Socius. .

Abstract

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has produced vastly disproportionate deaths for communities of color in the United States. Minnesota seemingly stands out as an exception to this national pattern, with white Minnesotans accounting for 80 percent of the population and 82 percent of COVID-19 deaths. The authors examine confirmed COVID-19 mortality alongside deaths indirectly attributable to the pandemic-"excess mortality"-in Minnesota. This analysis reveals profound racial disparities: age-adjusted excess mortality rates for whites are exceeded by a factor of 2.8 to 5.3 for all other racial groups, with the highest rates among Black, Latino, and Native Minnesotans. The seemingly small disparities in COVID-19 deaths in Minnesota reflect the interaction of three factors: the natural history of the disease, whose early toll was heavily concentrated in nursing homes; an exceptionally divergent age distribution in the state; and a greatly different proportion of excess mortality captured in confirmed COVID-19 rates for white Minnesotans compared with most other groups.

Keywords: COVID-19; excess mortality; racial disparities.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic in Minnesota, by type of mortality, race/ethnicity, and time period. Note: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) mortality is confirmed by lab test or other official diagnosis. Excess mortality is mortality above and beyond average mortality for the same group in the same months from 2017 to 2019. Excess mortality excludes external causes of mortality (e.g., accidents and violence) because many of those deaths have delayed reporting, preventing their inclusion for recent time periods. Crude rates are unadjusted for age. Age-adjusted rates are adjusted by reweighting age-specific mortality using the age distribution of the state of Minnesota. Further details on the data and measurement are given in the Methods Appendix.

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