Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 deaths hit racialized communities hardest: Stats Can

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Oct, 2020 10:07 PM
  • COVID-19 deaths hit racialized communities hardest: Stats Can

A new Statistics Canada report says communities with the most visible minorities had the highest mortality rates during the first wave of the novel coronavirus.

The report's authors say it is more evidence that the pandemic is disproportionately affecting visible minorities, who are more likely to live in overcrowded housing and work in jobs that put them more at risk of exposure to COVID-19.

Other studies have shown visible minorities are more likely to suffer from conditions such as diabetes and high blood pressure, which are considered to make an individual at higher risk for serious illness or death from COVID-19.

In the four biggest provinces — which account for 99 per cent of the deaths from COVID-19 between March and July — death rates from COVID-19 were twice as high in communities where more than one in four people identify as a visible minority, compared with communities where less than one per cent of residents did.

The death rates are adjusted for age to account for different age structures in different neighbourhoods.

It found in communities where less than one per cent of the population identified as a visible minority, the death in the first wave was 16.9 for every 100,000 people. In communities with a visible minority population between 10 and 25 per cent, the death rate was 27.3 and for communities with visible minority populations of more than 25 per cent, the death rate was 34.5.

In Ontario and Quebec, the rates were 3.5 times as high in communities where more than one-fourth of residents identify as visible minorities.

Nearly 8,800 people died in the first wave of the pandemic in Canada, 94 per cent of them in Quebec and Ontario.

Canadian and provincial public health agencies do not collect much data on the race of patients with COVID-19, so Statistics Canada used the national database on deaths and census data on visible minorities and neighbourhoods to compile the report.

Chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam, who said early in the pandemic there were no plans to collect race-based data on cases of COVID-19, said Wednesday that finding out who is most affected by an illness like COVID-19 can help drive policy decisions about where to direct resources.

"So under those circumstances, doubling efforts to focus on providing support, whether it's lab testing, or anything else in those communities, I think would be extremely important," she said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Family of man who killed himself files lawsuit

Family of man who killed himself files lawsuit
Uko's body was found in Regina's Wascana Lake on May 21. Relatives of the 20-year-old athlete from Abbotsford, B.C., have said he was in the provincial capital visiting an aunt when he sought help at the Regina General Hospital.

Family of man who killed himself files lawsuit

Long-term care needs fixing now: Trudeau

Long-term care needs fixing now: Trudeau
Trudeau is pushing the provinces to agree to harmonize minimum standards for long-term care so that vulnerable seniors are protected and cared-for well no matter where they live.

Long-term care needs fixing now: Trudeau

Crown argues to limit hearing in stabbing case

Crown argues to limit hearing in stabbing case
Gabriel Klein has already been convicted of second-degree murder and aggravated assault in the stabbing death of 13-year-old Letisha Reimer and injuring her friend in an attack in the rotunda of Abbotsford Secondary School in 2016.

Crown argues to limit hearing in stabbing case

Basant Motors continues tradition of giving away scholarships to 10 students including a front line worker

Basant Motors continues tradition of giving away scholarships to 10 students including a front line worker
On the dealership's 29th anniversary it generoulsy handed out $29,000 in scholarships to the best and the brightest students in the lower mainland.

Basant Motors continues tradition of giving away scholarships to 10 students including a front line worker

Stolen playground slide found in a backyard in Burnaby: RCMP

Stolen playground slide found in a backyard in Burnaby: RCMP
A groundskeeper had noticed that the slide, estimated to be valued at $5,000, was missing and reported it to police.

Stolen playground slide found in a backyard in Burnaby: RCMP

Provinces need to fight racism in health care: PM

Provinces need to fight racism in health care: PM
The issue of anti-Indigenous racism in health care gained new attention from outrage over the treatment of Joyce Echaquan, who used her phone to livestream hospital staff using racist slurs against her as she lay dying in a Quebec hospital last month.

Provinces need to fight racism in health care: PM