Authors
Timon McPhearson, Zbigniew Grabowski, Pablo Herreros-Cantis, Ahmed Mustafa, Luis Ortiz, Christopher Kennedy, Claudia Tomateo, Bianca Lopez, Veronica Olivotto, Avigail Vantu
Publication date
2020/12/8
Journal
Journal of Extreme Events
Volume
7
Issue
04
Pages
2150007
Publisher
World Scientific Publishing Company
Description
We examine the uneven social and spatial distributions of COVID-19 and their relationships with indicators of social vulnerability in the U.S. epicenter, New York City (NYC). As of July 17th, 2020, NYC, despite having only 2.5% of the U.S. population, has 6% of all confirmed cases, and 16% of all deaths, making it a key learning ground for the social dynamics of the disease. Our analysis focuses on the multiple potential social, economic, and demographic drivers of disproportionate impacts in COVID-19 cases and deaths, as well as population rates of testing. Findings show that immediate impacts of COVID-19 largely fall along lines of race and class. Indicators of poverty, race, disability, language isolation, rent burden, unemployment, lack of health insurance, and housing crowding all significantly drive spatial patterns in prevalence of COVID-19 testing, confirmed cases, death rates, and severity. Income in …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
T McPhearson, Z Grabowski, P Herreros-Cantis… - Journal of Extreme Events, 2020