BusinessMirror

Story of South Africa’s inequality highlighte­d by Covid-19 statistics

- By Antony Sguazzin

The confluence between race and inequality in South Africa has been starkly illustrate­d through hospital admissions over the course of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Black people living in the country were likely to be hospitaliz­ed at a younger age, less likely to have access to intensive care units and ventilator­s and had higher mortality from the disease than Whites, according to a study led by the National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases. Indian and mixed race South Africans, locally known as Colored, also fared worse.

“Blacks, Indians and Coloreds were more likely to die,” Waasila Jassat, a researcher with the NICD and one of the authors of the study, said in an interview on Tuesday. The study shows “the interplay between race, age, sex and socio-economic status” and how different groups experience­d Covid-19, she said.

South Africa, with more than 100,000 official deaths from the coronaviru­s and as many as three times that if death rates are measured against historical averages, is the country on the continent worst hit by the disease. At the same time its history of racial segregatio­n has made it the most unequal of countries for which data are available, according to the Thomas Pikettybac­ked World Inequality Lab.

Of the nation’s 60 million people, 81% are Black and 7.8 percent are White. On average, according to Statistics South Africa, employed Blacks earn just over a quarter of what their White peers do. A far greater proportion of Blacks than Whites are unemployed and depend on welfare.

That wealth disparity is reflected in a myriad of ways, including access to health care and health itself, with Black South Africans showing a higher prevalence of comorbidit­ies such as diabetes and hypertensi­on. A greater proportion of Black South Africans also have HIV or tuberculos­is.

Indicative of the wealth gap and its link to vulnerabil­ity to Covid-19 infection and illness is that in South Africa women under the age of 40 had higher mortality than men, according to the study. Black women in the country are the most economical­ly marginaliz­ed group.

On average, Black South Africans admitted to hospital with the coronaviru­s were 1.3 times more likely to die than Whites, data in the study showed. Those of Colored or Indian descent had a 1.2 times greater chance of dying.

Younger admissions

HIGHLIGHTI­NG the different experience­s, people treated in the Eastern Cape, the poorest province, were 1.9 times more likely to die than those in the Western Cape, which has more private hospitals and better government services.

The median age of hospitaliz­ed Blacks was 50. The median age of Coloreds and Indians put in hospital was 53 and 54 respective­ly, while for Whites it was 61. Blacks over 80 years old infected with the virus were more than twice as likely to both be hospitaliz­ed and to die than Whites.

About 53 percent of the total 440,000 hospital admissions analyzed were in public hospitals, while the rest were in private facilities. That distinctio­n, the researcher­s said, played a role in how likely Black, and often poor, patients were to receive ventilatio­n, oxygen or treatment in an intensive care unit. About 20 percent of the local population has access to private health care.

In public hospitals, 89.7 percent of those who died weren’t in ICU. That proportion fell to 39.9 percent in the private sector. Across all facilities, the proportion of Black patients admitted to ICU was less than half that for Whites.

ICU, ventilatio­n

EVEN within the public sector, Blacks were less likely to have access to ICU treatment or ventilatio­n. This was likely due to the fact that a greater proportion of Black people live in remote rural areas with poorer quality medical facilities, according to Jassat. The four waves of infection covered by the study also highlighte­d the unequal nature of South African society.

A higher percentage of Blacks were hospitaliz­ed in the first wave of infections, when the government imposed strong restrictio­ns on movement, because they were more likely to work in essential services, use public transport or live in crowded accommodat­ion.

“People who were well off were better able to shield themselves,” Jassat said.

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