Sociology of health & illness

How overlapping social inequalities affect long COVID risk in the United States

Updated

Abstract

Essence

Long COVID prevalence in the United States was patterned by intersecting race, gender, and socioeconomic status rather than by socioeconomic advantage alone.

Evidence

This national cross-sectional analysis used Household Pulse Survey data from 535,300 U.S. adults to compare Long COVID risk across race, gender, and socioeconomic groups.

Caveat

The survey-based observational design can identify intersectional disparities but cannot prove that structural inequalities caused Long COVID risk differences.

Simplified

Full Text

Full text is available at the source.

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