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Understanding the excess COVID-19 burden among immigrants in Norway

Kjøllesdal, Marte Karoline Råberg; Juarez, SP; Aradhya, S; Indseth, Thor
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
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Kj%C3%B8llesdal_2022_Und.pdf (431.3Kb)
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2999037
Utgivelsesdato
2022
Metadata
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  • Journal articles (peer reviewed) [5298]
  • Publikasjoner fra Cristin - NMBU [6263]
Originalversjon
Journal of Public Health. 2022, 1-10.   10.1093/pubmed/fdac033
Sammendrag
Background: We aim to use intermarriage as a measure to disentangle the role of exposure to virus, susceptibility and care in differences in burden of COVID-19, by comparing rates of COVID-19 infections between immigrants married to a native and to another immigrant. Methods: Using data from the Norwegian emergency preparedness, register participants (N=2 312 836) were linked with their registered partner and categorized based on own and partner's country of birth. From logistic regressions, odds ratios (OR) of COVID-19 infection (15 June 2020-01 June 2021) and related hospitalization were calculated adjusted for age, sex, municipality, medical risk, occupation, household income, education and crowded housing. Results: Immigrants were at increased risk of COVID-19 and related hospitalization regardless of their partners being immigrant or not, but immigrants married to a Norwegian-born had lower risk than other immigrants. Compared with intramarried Norwegian-born, odds of COVID-19 infection was higher among persons in couples with one Norwegian-born and one immigrant from Europe/USA/Canada/Oceania (OR 1.42-1.46) or Africa/Asia/Latin-America (OR 1.91-2.01). Odds of infection among intramarried immigrants from Africa/Asia/Latin-America was 4.92. For hospitalization, the corresponding odds were slightly higher. Conclusion: Our study suggests that the excess burden of COVID-19 among immigrants is explained by differences in exposure and care rather than susceptibility. Keywords: COVID-19; Norway; hospitalization; immigrant; infection; register data.
 
Understanding the excess COVID-19 burden among immigrants in Norway
 
Tidsskrift
Journal of Public Health

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