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Kitchener-Waterloo

Black people, minorities, low-income earners at higher risk for COVID-19 infection

New local data suggests the COVID-19 pandemic is disproportionately impacting Black people, visible minorities, lower income earnersand people whose first language is not English or French.

New data released by Region of Waterloo Public Health this week

People wait in line at a new COVID-19 testing facility in Scaborough, Ont. (Paul Smith/CBC)

New local data suggests the COVID-19 pandemic is disproportionately impacting Black people, visible minorities, lower income earnersand people whose first language is not English or French.

Region of Waterloo Public Health collected data on socio-demographic indicators from more than 680 COVID-19 positive cases between July and October.

Public health officials revealed the findings in the region's committee of the whole meeting on Tuesday.

"The COVD-19 pandemic has unfortunately accentuated existing structural and systemic inequities and these findings underscore the need for a greater collective community response for groups and neighbourhoods disproportionately affected," said Dr. Hsiu-Li Wang, theregion's acting medical officer of health.

Findings

According to the report, many caseswere missing data, "which significantly limits the reliability and generalizability of the results." For example, of the 680cases, about 500 people provided information about their race.

The findings suggest that while Black people accounted for 16.7 per cent of COVID-19 cases, but only 2.9 per cent of the region's population. Visible minorities made up 63.7 per cent of cases in comparison to 19 per cent of the population.

Most people who tested positive didn't indicate household income. Among those that did, the largest group 10.6 per cent had a household income of less than $29,999.

A large number of cases indicated they spokeCanada'sofficial languages, followed by Arabic, Somali and Punjabi.

The proportion of non-official language speakers ishigher than expected when compared to localcensus data. About 61.8 per cent of people in Waterloo region who tested positive for COVID-19 speak a non-official language but they only makeup 23.6 per cent of the population.

Next steps

Public health officials said future data collection will have First Nationsrepresentation, which wasn't a demographic question inthis report.

They are also working with community leaders to prevent further spread inaffected communities.

Officials said they're in the process of implementing a safe voluntary isolation site program for larger families who need the space and support.