High Rates of COVID-19 Infection Among Indigenous Maya at a US Safety-Net Health System in California

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Abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has disproportionately and negatively affected communities of color in the United States, especially Black, Latinx, and Indigenous populations. We report a cluster of COVID-19 cases among the Maya in Alameda County, California, most of whom were misclassified in public health data as nonindigenous Spanish-speaking people. We conducted a retrospective cohort study of all COVID-19 tests performed from April 1 through May 31, 2020, at Alameda Health System. A total of 1561 tests from 1533 patients were performed, with an overall test positivity rate of 17.0% (N = 265). We used the language field from the electronic health record to identify 29 patients as speaking an indigenous Mayan language; by medical record review, we identified 52 additional Maya patients. Maya patients had a test positivity rate of 72.8% as compared with 27.1% (P

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Foo, P. K., Perez, B., Gupta, N., Lorenzo, G. J., Misa, N. Y., Gutierrez, B. S., … Anderson, E. S. (2021). High Rates of COVID-19 Infection Among Indigenous Maya at a US Safety-Net Health System in California. Public Health Reports, 136(3), 295–300. https://doi.org/10.1177/0033354921990370

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