Twice as many black and Hispanic New Yorkers caught coronavirus last spring compared to white people and a QUARTER of city residents were infected, antibody study reveals
Researchers looked at coronavirus antibody levels among New York City residents between May 13, 2020 and July 21, 2020
About 35% of Hispanic New Yorkers and 33% of black New Yorkers tested positive for antibodies
Comparatively, just 16% of white residents had antibodies, meaning rates among minorities were more than twice as high
Frontline jobs with mostly minority employees, such as nursing care facilities and home health care service, were the sectors with the highest antibody rates
New York City data show 44% of white residents have received at least one vaccine dose compared to 26% of blacks and 31% of Hispanics
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Unsatisfied with the University s COVID-19 testing policies, many hope that the vaccine will address what the institution did not
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In a study of over 73 million delivery hospitalizations during a 19-year period in the United States, researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and Columbia University Irving Medical Center found that failure to rescue from severe maternal morbidity contributes more than a half of the 3-fold difference in maternal mortality between Black women and White women. Failure to rescue refers to death resulting from severe maternal morbidity such as eclampsia, acute heart failure, and sepsis. The findings are published in the journal
Obstetrics and Gynecology. Despite the continuing decrease in failure to rescue over the entire study period, racial and ethnic disparities in failure to rescue persisted, underscoring the need to identify factors accounting for these disparities and to identify interventions to avoid potentially preventable deaths in racial and ethnic minority women, said Jean Guglielminotti, MD, PhD, in the Department of Anesthesiology