Examining socioeconomic factors to understand the hospital case-fatality rates of COVID-19 in the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil

02/28/2021
by   Camila Lorenz, et al.
0

Understanding differences in hospital case-fatality rates (HCFRs) of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) may help evaluate its severity and the capacity of the healthcare system to reduce mortality. We examined the variability in HCFRs of COVID-19 in relation to spatial inequalities in socioeconomic factors across the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil. We found that HCFRs were higher for men and for individuals aged 60 years and older. Our models identified per capita income as a significant factor that is negatively associated with the HCFRs of COVID-19, even after adjusting by age, sex and presence of risk factors.

READ FULL TEXT
research
12/20/2021

Trends in hospitalised mortality risk and lengths of stay during the first, second and current waves of COVID-19 in England: a cohort study

Widespread vaccination campaigns have changed the landscape for COVID-19...
research
05/15/2023

Quantifying the risk of workplace COVID-19 clusters in terms of commuter, workplace, and population characteristics

Objectives: To identify and quantify risk factors that contribute to clu...
research
01/18/2021

Data Resource Profile: Egress Behavior from Select NYC COVID-19 Exposed Health Facilities March-May 2020

Vector control strategies are central to the mitigation and containment ...
research
06/26/2020

Mapping the South African health landscape in response to COVID-19

When the COVID-19 disease pandemic infiltrated the world, there was an i...
research
02/19/2021

Numerical study of COVID-19 spatial-temporal spreading in London

Recent study reported that an aerosolised virus (COVID-19) can survive i...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset