The Day

Blacks are likelier to be hospitaliz­ed for COVID

- By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

Washington — Blacks were nearly four times more likely than whites to be hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 among people with Medicare, the government said Monday.

The analysis from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services also found that having advanced kidney disease was an even more severe risk indicator for hospitaliz­ation than race, ethnicity, or being poor.

“It reconfirms long-standing issues around disparitie­s and vulnerable population­s,” said Medicare administra­tor Seema Verma, adding that “race and ethnicity are far from the only story.’’

Medicare’s analysis confirms what The Associated Press and other media organizati­ons have previously reported about African Americans and Latinos bearing the brunt of the pandemic, while adding new details.

The group covered by Medicare is considered the most vulnerable to the coronaviru­s. Most of its 60 million enrollees are age 65 and older. Also covered are younger people who qualify because of disabiliti­es.

From Jan. 1-May 16, more than 325,000 Medicare recipients were diagnosed with COVID-19, and nearly 110,000 were hospitaliz­ed, according to the analysis of claims data. Medicare spent $1.9 billion for hospital care, an average of about $23,000 per case for people enrolled in the traditiona­l fee-forservice part of the program. The analysis found that:

■ Black people with Medicare were hospitaliz­ed at a rate of 465 per 100,000 enrollees, or nearly four times the rate for whites, which was 123 per 100,000.

■ The rate for Hispanics was 258 per 100,000, or about twice the rate of whites. Asians were about one-and-a-half times more likely than whites to be hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19.

■ Low-income Medicare recipients who are also covered by their state Medicaid programs had a hospitaliz­ation rate that was slightly higher than the rate for African-Americans.

■ There were fewer COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations among Medicare recipients in rural areas, when compared to cities and suburbs.

But all in all, having advanced kidney disease was by far the biggest risk factor, the study found. People whose kidneys have stopped working to the point where they can’t live without dialysis or a transplant had a hospitaliz­ation rate of 1,341 per 100,000, or nearly three times higher than the rates for low-income beneficiar­ies and African-Americans.

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