San Francisco Chronicle

Mission District testing: High rate of virus found among Latinos.

UCSF study finds workers more at risk

- By Mallory Moench Mallory Moench is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: mallory.moench@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @mallorymoe­nch

UCSF released the final results Thursday from the mass testing of nearly 4,000 people in a Mission District neighborho­od, revealing a high proportion of previous infections among lowincome, essential Latino workers.

Results of antibody and nasal swab tests showed about 6% of the residents had been infected by late April and early May. Around 2% were actively infected at the time of testing. A disproport­ionate majority of new infections were among Latinos who continued to work.

“This suggests health effects of ethnic and socioecono­mic inequities in the community increased during San Francisco’s shelterinp­lace ordinance and helps explain why (Latino) people have been disproport­ionately affected by the pandemic,” principal investigat­or and senior study author Dr. Diane Havlir, chief of the UCSF Division of HIV, Infectious Disease and Global Medicine at San Francisco General Hospital, said in a statement.

Latinos account for half of San Francisco’s coronaviru­s infections despite representi­ng only 15% of the city’s population. Among residents and workers in the 16squarebl­ock section of the Mission District tested by UCSF, Latinos were more likely to continue to go to work after the shelterinp­lace order, which increased their infection rate. Earlier in the pandemic, infections fell along the lines of the racial makeup of the neighborho­od – 67% Latino, 16% white, and 17% other. By late April, Latinos accounted for 96% of new infections.

The study cited risk factors including an inability to work from home, unemployme­nt and a household income of less than $50,000 per year.

The percentage of those previously infected – around 6% – was higher than other studies that conducted antibody testing. A community survey by Stanford University in Santa Clara County reported a past infection rate of 2% to 4%, while similar mass testing in the Marin County enclave of Bolinas revealed almost no infections.

The study’s authors and public health experts said the results exemplifie­d the virus’ disproport­ionate impact on communitie­s of color.

“Pandemics exploit the existing inequities in society, putting a larger health and economic burden on communitie­s who already face structural disadvanta­ges such as income inequality, crowded housing conditions, systemic racism and discrimina­tion,” Dr. Grant Colfax, San Francisco’s director of health, said in a statement.

 ?? Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle ?? Health care workers test Mission District residents for the coronaviru­s in April.
Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle Health care workers test Mission District residents for the coronaviru­s in April.

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