More than 30 per cent of deaths in England among over-30s from Bangladeshi, Black African or Pakistani ethnic groups since 2020 have involved covid-19 – more than double the proportion among adults recorded as white British
Health 3 February 2022
A woman looks at the National Covid Memorial Wall in London, UK, last month
Tejas Sandhu/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
Since the pandemic began, the coronavirus has been involved in more than 30 per cent of all deaths in people aged over 30 in England whose ethnic group was recorded as Bangladeshi, Black African or Pakistani, according to a New Scientist analysis of data released by the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
This is more than double the proportion of covid-19 deaths during this period among people whose ethnic group was recorded as white British; covid-19 was involved in 14 per cent of deaths in this group. These figures are based on the number of people between the ages of 30 and 100 who died between 24 January 2020 and 1 December 2021 in England.
“There are a number of reasons why ethnic minorities are more likely to contract and die from covid-19,” says Azeem Majeed at Imperial College London. Ethnic minorities are more likely to have lower incomes, work in public-facing roles and live in multigenerational households or high population density areas, he says.
Advertisement
Deaths were classed by the ONS as involving covid-19 if the illness was mentioned on a death certificate. This could be due to a person testing positive for the coronavirus prior to death or because a doctor made a covid-19 diagnosis based on a person’s symptoms close to death.
Covid-19 was involved in a higher proportion of deaths in all ethnic minority groups than in white British people during this period. People of Bangladeshi descent were hit hardest, with covid-19 being involved in 39 per cent of deaths. It was involved in 35 per cent of deaths in people of Pakistani descent, 31 per cent of deaths in people of Black African descent and 20 per cent of deaths in people of Chinese descent during this time period.
These ethnic disparities haven’t improved over the course of the pandemic or since the roll-out of vaccines. Analysis of ONS data from 13 June to 1 December 2021 – corresponding to England’s third and most recent wave – shows that more than a quarter of deaths in people of Bangladeshi descent involved coronavirus during this time, while this was the case for only 5.5 per cent of deaths in white British people. Covid-19 was involved in nearly 15 per cent of deaths among people of Caribbean descent during these months.
“These findings highlight the importance of improving vaccine uptake across all ethnic groups,” says Yize Wan at Queen Mary University of London. “The impact of not doing this may be an important reason why we are seeing these continued differences in the third wave.”
Wan says people in some ethnic minority groups are less likely to be vaccinated and so are more vulnerable to dying from coronavirus. According to the latest data collated from GP records up to 26 January, 80 per cent of Black people over the age of 80 in England have received the first dose of a coronavirus vaccine compared with 98 per cent of white people in this age group.
Studies suggest that ethnic minority groups are more likely to be vaccine hesitant due to historical racism and a lack of trust in the medical and political establishments.
Majeed says these third wave disparities suggest that the UK’s Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) should have given ethnic minorities a higher priority when deciding who should be jabbed first.
“More than two years into the pandemic, we are still talking about the disproportionate impact of covid-19 on these communities when we should be putting in place policies to mitigate these disparities,” says Mohammad Razai at St George’s University of London. “The [UK] government must acknowledge the socioeconomic and systemic causes and drivers of these inequalities and must get serious about tackling them.”
“These figures are staggering,” says a spokesperson for the race equality charity Runnymede Trust. “Longstanding racial and economic inequality is at the heart of understanding the coronavirus pandemic.”
“We have known for some time which measures can be implemented to better support our ethnic minority communities,” she says. “Alongside other charities in 2020 we called for door-to-door vaccination units in urban areas with a high density of multigenerational households, to make healthcare services more accessible for groups that traditionally have a harder time getting the care and services they require.”
It is important to note that these figures aren’t perfect and that just because coronavirus was recorded on a person’s death certificate, it doesn’t mean they actually died from the illness, says James Nazroo at the University of Manchester, UK.
When contacted about these findings, the UK Department for Health and Social Care referred New Scientist to the Cabinet Office, which in turn referred us to a statement from December 2021 on a report into the disproportionate impact of covid-19 on ethnic minority groups.
In this statement, equalities minister Kemi Badenoch said: “Our understanding of how Covid-19 affects different ethnic groups has transformed since the pandemic began. We know now that factors like the job someone does, where they live, and how many people they live with, impacts how susceptible they are to the virus and it’s imperative that those more at risk get their booster vaccine or their first and second dose if they are yet to have them.”
“This work is not over. We still need everyone to get vaccinated to protect ourselves, our families, and our society.”
More on these topics:
Read The Full Article Here