Back to Search Start Over

Deprivation and Exposure to Public Activities during the COVID-19 Pandemic in England and Wales

Authors :
Sarah Beale
Isobel Braithwaite
Annalan M D Navaratnam
Pia Hardelid
Alison Rodger
Anna Aryee
Thomas Byrne
Wing Lam Erica Fong
Ellen Fragaszy
Cyril Geismar
Jana Kovar
Vincent Nguyen
Parth Patel
Madhumita Shrotri
Robert W Aldridge
Andrew Hayward
Susan Michie
Linda Wijlaars
Eleni Nastouli
Moira Spyer
Ben Killingley
Ingemar Cox
Vasileios Lampos
Rachel A McKendry
Tao Cheng
Yunzhe Liu
Anne M Johnson
Jo Gibbs
Richard Gilson
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

BackgroundDifferential exposure to public activities and non-household contacts may contribute to stark deprivation-related inequalities in SARS-CoV-2 infection and outcomes, but has not been directly investigated. We set out to investigate whether participants in Virus Watch – a large community cohort study based in England and Wales – reported different levels of exposure to public activities and non-household contacts during the Autumn-Winter phase of the COVID-19 pandemic according to postcode-level socioeconomic deprivation.MethodsParticipants (n=20120-25228 across surveys) reported their daily activities during three weekly periods in late November 2020, late December 2020, and mid-February 2021. Deprivation was quantified based on participants’ postcode of residence using English or Welsh Indices of Multiple Deprivation quintiles. We used Poisson mixed effect models with robust standard errors to estimate the relationship between deprivation and risk of exposure to public activities during each survey period.ResultsRelative to participants in the least deprived areas, participants in the most deprived areas persistently exhibited elevated risk of exposure to vehicle sharing (aRR range across time points 1.73-8.52), public transport (aRR 3.13-5.73), work or education outside of the household (aRR 1.09-1.21), essential shops (aRR 1.09-1.13) and non-household contacts (aRR 1.15-1.19) across multiple survey periods.ConclusionDifferential exposure to essential public activities in deprived communities is likely to contribute to inequalities in infection risk and outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic. Public health interventions to reduce exposure during essential activities and financial and practical support to enable low-paid workers to stay at home during periods of intense transmission may reduce COVID-related inequalities.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........69c51c127ad8e94e2670b25120e8da43