Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

StatCan says immigrants early victims to COVID-19

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jun, 2021 01:48 PM
  • StatCan says immigrants early victims to COVID-19

Canadian neighbourhoods where visible minorities live had a COVID-19 death rate about two times higher than areas that had a low proportion of immigrants, says a study from Statistics Canada.

The study looked at the pandemic from early March to July last year, when there were more than 8,300 deaths.

About 67 per cent of those deaths were reported in Quebec, 28 per cent in Ontario and three per cent in B.C. Of those, immigrants made up 48 per cent of the fatalities in Quebec, 45 per cent in Ontario and four in British Columbia.

During the early days of the pandemic, it said about 67 per cent of those deaths were reported in Quebec, 28 per cent in Ontario and three per cent in B.C.

Immigrants made up 48 per cent of the fatalities in Quebec, 45 in Ontario and four in British Columbia.

COVID-19 had a disproportionately high impact on certain populations, the study said.

"The findings here show that immigrants’ share of deaths attributable to COVID-19 was proportionately higher than immigrants’ share in the total Canadian population. This is especially true among those younger than 65 and among males, as well as in British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec."

Immigrants accounted for 30 per cent of all COVID-19-related deaths among those under 65 although they make up 20 per cent of the population, it said.

Between 44 and 51 per cent of people who died from COVID-19 in Vancouver and Toronto were immigrants, the study said.

Most of the immigrants who died lived in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver, it said.

Other studies have concluded immigrants are at a higher risk of death because they work in essential services, may live in overcrowded or multi-generational housing, and could have lower language proficiency and health literacy.

France and the United States have shown similarly high numbers of COVID-19-related deaths among immigrants, it said. However, international migrants in Italy had no increased risk of poor outcomes compared with their Italian-born counterparts, it added.

Andy Yan, the director of Simon Fraser University’s City Program, said the data is similar to what he has been mapping and studying over the past few months, where those in communities within Toronto and Vancouver who are working blue-collar jobs have been hit harder by COVID-19.

"It's a complicated conversation about housing and labour," he said in an interview. "Canada's COVID front lines are basically defined by the country's economic and social ones."

Yan's study found COVID-19 hot spots were correlated with high percentages of people working in manufacturing, households where three or more people in them contributed to living costs, or where five or more people lived in one home.

Other issues compounding the risk to this group include housing conditions that may have multi-generational families living in one household or a number of people living together because of costs, Yan said.

Lack of knowledge of English, economic instability and discrimination also add to the risk, he said.

"Race and ethnicity are not shorthand for COVID but part of the complicated story of economics, housing and the pandemic."

The visible minorities making up many of these hot spots include South and southeast Asian populations, his correlation analysis found.

"It's not to say that you are South Asian and you're at risk," he said.

"But it's all those things that are wrapped together in terms of say labour, in terms of living conditions as opposed to ethnicity."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. AstraZeneca recipients can choose second dose

B.C. AstraZeneca recipients can choose second dose
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says those who received the AstraZeneca vaccine earlier this year made "the right choice" in getting vaccinated, and helped to ease the COVID-19 caseload in the province.

B.C. AstraZeneca recipients can choose second dose

199 COVID19 cases for Thursday

199 COVID19 cases for Thursday
The 7-day average falls to 229 cases per day, the lowest since October 24. It's the first time that BC has 3 days with fewer than 200 new cases since October 18-20.

199 COVID19 cases for Thursday

Homeless man dies after being run over in Downtown Eastside alley

Homeless man dies after being run over in Downtown Eastside alley
VPD investigators believe the man, a 39-year-old with no fixed address, was using drugs in a lane near Gore Street and Union Avenue on May 26 when he fell asleep in front of a parkade gate around 3:30 p.m. A driver, who was attempting to enter the underground parking lot, mistakenly drove over him.

Homeless man dies after being run over in Downtown Eastside alley

Liberals, Tories clash over criticism of China

Liberals, Tories clash over criticism of China
Liberals and Conservatives have stumbled into a thorny debate over fears that criticism of China can bleed into bigotry, as wariness of the global superpower rises alongside incidents of anti-Asian racism in Canada.

Liberals, Tories clash over criticism of China

Suspect arrested and charged with attempted murder following stabbing outside Columbia SkyTrain station in New Westminster

Suspect arrested and charged with attempted murder following stabbing outside Columbia SkyTrain station in New Westminster
Although Mr. Ghulam and the victim are associated to known Lower Mainland gangs, investigators have not yet been able to confirm the motive behind the stabbing. 

Suspect arrested and charged with attempted murder following stabbing outside Columbia SkyTrain station in New Westminster

Feds hiking fines for hotel quarantine violators

Feds hiking fines for hotel quarantine violators
The federal government is increasing the fine for air travellers who refuse to quarantine in a designated hotel for three days after arriving in Canada.

Feds hiking fines for hotel quarantine violators