Socioeconomic Patterns of COVID-19 Clusters in Low-Incidence City, Hong Kong.

Gary K K Chung, Siu-Ming Chan, Yat-Hang Chan, Jean Woo, Hung Wong, Samuel Y Wong, Eng Kiong Yeoh, Michael Marmot, Roger Y Chung
Author Information

Abstract

Although coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreaks have been relatively well controlled in Hong Kong, containment remains challenging among socioeconomically disadvantaged persons. They are at higher risk for widespread COVID-19 transmission through sizable clustering, probably because of exposure to social settings in which existing mitigation policies had differential socioeconomic effects.

Keywords

References

  1. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2018 May 31;15(6): [PMID: 29857544]
  2. BMJ Open. 2020 Sep 29;10(9):e039749 [PMID: 32994257]
  3. Nat Med. 2020 Nov;26(11):1714-1719 [PMID: 32943787]
  4. Lancet Healthy Longev. 2020 Oct;1(1):e21-e31 [PMID: 34173614]
  5. Spat Spatiotemporal Epidemiol. 2020 Aug;34:100355 [PMID: 32807400]
  6. Lancet Reg Health West Pac. 2020 Nov;4:100052 [PMID: 34013218]
  7. J Epidemiol Community Health. 2020 Feb;74(2):164-172 [PMID: 31690588]
  8. Int J Equity Health. 2020 Jan 28;19(1):13 [PMID: 31992307]
  9. BMC Med. 2020 Sep 4;18(1):271 [PMID: 32883276]

MeSH Term

COVID-19
Hong Kong
Humans
Incidence
SARS-CoV-2
Socioeconomic Factors

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0COVID-19coronavirusHongKongdiseasetransmissionclusteringsocioeconomicrespiratoryAlthoughoutbreaksrelativelywellcontrolledcontainmentremainschallengingamongsocioeconomicallydisadvantagedpersonshigherriskwidespreadsizableprobablyexposuresocialsettingsexistingmitigationpoliciesdifferentialeffectsSocioeconomicPatternsClustersLow-IncidenceCityChinaSARS-CoV-2infectioninfectionssevereacutesyndrome2statusviruseszoonoses

Similar Articles

Cited By