Daily Breeze (Torrance)

COVID-19 deaths soar when eviction moratorium­s end, UCLA study finds.

- By City News Service

COVID-19 death rates increased significan­tly when states lifted eviction moratorium­s that were put in place to protect renters who could not make payments during the pandemic, according to a UCLA-led study released Monday.

According to the study, published in the American Journal of Epidemiolo­gy, the number of deaths attributed to COVID-19 was five times higher in the four months after eviction moratorium­s expired, and the number of COVID-19 cases doubled.

“Evictions may have accelerate­d COVID-19

transmissi­on by decreasing individual­s’ ability to socially distance,” said the study’s senior author, Frederick Zimmerman, a professor of health policy and management at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.

Researcher­s focused on data from Washington, D.C., and 43 states with eviction moratorium­s. Twenty-seven of the states lifted the moratorium­s before September

2020, and 17 of them extended them at least until September.

The study suggests the United States experience­d 433,700 more COVID-19 cases and 10,700 more deaths during the summer of 2020 than it would have if eviction moratorium­s remained in place. In total, the nation experience­d more than 6.3 million cases of COVID-19 by September 2020 and about 193,000 people died by that time.

“The expiration of eviction moratorium­s was associated with increased COVID-19 incidence and mortality, which supports the public-health rationale for eviction prevention to limit COVID-19 cases and deaths,” said Dr. Craig Pollack, associate professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

The study’s lead author, Dr. Kathryn Leifheit, a postdoctor­al scholar in epidemiolo­gy at the Fielding School, said evictions lead to more people moving into crowded housing or becoming homeless and living in shelters. She added that “each of those outcomes connotes an increased risk of exposure to COVID-19.”

People who are facing the threat of eviction also may resort to work that exposes them to the virus and increases their risk of infection and transmissi­on, she said.

While the study found that death rates and case rates increased drasticall­y when eviction moratorium­s expired, the researcher­s acknowledg­ed that their analysis has several limitation­s. They noted that they were unable to measure the number of evictions that took place in states where moratorium­s expired. The study also did not account for local eviction protection­s that may have remained in effect longer than statewide moratorium­s.

When the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention extended the federal eviction moratorium through July 31, 2021, it cited pre-published data from the UCLA-led study.

“Specifical­ly, the authors compared the COVID-19 incidence and mortality rates in states that lifted their [moratorium­s] with the rates in states that maintained their [moratorium­s],” the CDC order stated.

“In these models, the authors accounted for timevaryin­g indicators of each state’s test count as well as major public health interventi­ons including lifting stay-at-home orders, school closures, and mask mandates.”

The study was funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Evidence for Action program and the National Center for Advancing Translatio­nal Sciences of the National Institutes of Health through a grant from the Boston University Clinical and Translatio­nal Science Institute.

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