4.7 Article

Growing racial/ethnic disparities in overdose mortality before and during the COVID-19 pandemic in California

期刊

PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
卷 153, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2021.106845

关键词

Substance use; Overdose; Racial; ethnic disparities; COVID-19 pandemic; Fentanyl; Methamphetamine

资金

  1. UCLA Medical Scientist Training Program (National Institute of General Medical Sciences) [GM008042]
  2. California HIV/AIDS Research Program (CHRP) [TU4-LA-594]
  3. UCLA Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) NIH/NCATS grant [UL1-TR001881]
  4. NIMH-funded Center for HIV Identification, Prevention, and Treatment (CHIPTS) NIMH [P30MH058107]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

During the COVID-19 pandemic, overdose mortality rates have surged, with all racial/ethnic groups surpassing expected trends. Particularly concerning is the rapid increase in overdose mortality rates in Black and Latinx communities. In California, Black individuals saw a higher overdose mortality rate compared to White individuals, reflecting a growing disparity that calls for increased attention and investment in addressing racial disparities in substance use treatment and harm reduction.
As overdose mortality is spiking during the COVID-19 pandemic, few race/ethnicity-stratified trends are available. This is of particular concern as overdose mortality was increasing most rapidly in Black and Latinx communities prior to the pandemic. We used quarterly, age-standardized overdose mortality rates from California to assess trends by race/ethnicity and drug involved over time. Rates from 2020 Q2-Q4 were compared to expected trends based on ARIMA forecasting models fit using data from 2006 to 2020 Q1. In 2020 Q2-Q4 overdose death rates rose by 49.8% from 2019, exceeding an expected increase of 11.5% (95%CI: 0.5%-22.5%). Rates significantly exceeded forecasted trends for all racial/ethnic groups. Black/African American individuals saw an increase of 52.4% from 2019, compared to 42.6% among their White counterparts. The absolute Black-White overdose mortality gap rose from 0.7 higher per 100,000 for Black individuals in 2018 to 4.8 in 2019, and further increased to 9.9 during the pandemic. Black overdose mortality in California was therefore 34.3% higher than that of White individuals in 2020 Q2-Q4. This reflects growing methamphetamine-, cocaine-, and fentanylinvolved deaths among Black communities. Growing racial disparities in overdose must be understood in the context of the unequal social and economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, during which time Black communities have been subjected to the dual burden of disproportionate COVID-19 deaths and rising overdose mortality. Increased investments are required to ameliorate racial/ethnic disparities in substance use treatment, harm reduction, and the structural drivers of overdose, as part of the COVID-19 response and post-pandemic recovery efforts.

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