Montreal's poorest and most racially diverse neighbourhoods hit hardest by COVID-19, data analysis shows - Action News
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Montreal's poorest and most racially diverse neighbourhoods hit hardest by COVID-19, data analysis shows

Since the start of the pandemic, Montreal districts with higher numbers of Black people and more cramped housing have registered the most cases of COVID-19, according to an analysis of census data by CBC News.

Census data shows how race, housing and income correlate to spread of COVID-19

Tiffany Callender, executive director of the Cte-des-Neiges Black Community Association, has been calling for public health to collect and publish race-based data. She says such information could have been used to identify and protect vulnerable communities. (Alison Northcott/CBC)

Since the start of the pandemic, Montreal districts with higher numbers of Black people and more cramped housing have registered the most cases of COVID-19, according to an analysis by CBC News.

The findings confirm what many already suspected,given the high death toll inlow-income, racially diverse neighbourhoods like Montral-Nord, where 222 people have died from the virus more than in all of British Columbia.

They also echo observations made in other major North American cities, where the novel coronavirus has disproportionately affected the poorest and most racially diverse neighbourhoods.

"This says the conditions in which people are living leave them exposed in a very serious, excessive way to COVID-19," said Tiffany Callender, executive director of the Cte-des-Neiges Black Community Association.

Unlike in some other jurisdictions, in Canada, public health officials have not disclosed data on the race of COVID-19 patients. That has frustrated community activists like Callender, who says such information could have been used to identify and protect vulnerable communities.

"As Black people, our shared lived experience is not considered. The only way to prove it is with race-based data," she said.

Though the province's public health director, Dr. Horacio Arruda, promisedin early May the government would begin collecting race-based health data, the Health Ministry acknowledged Wednesday there are no immediate plans to do so.

"We understand the importance of this information and are sensitive to it," the ministry said in a statement to CBC News.

For the moment, the ministry said, "all our efforts are being put toward protecting the population and those infected."

(CBC News)

In order to get a more accurate picture of how race and other socio-economic factors have played a role in the outbreak, CBC News cross-referenced census data with casenumbers for each borough or municipality, released daily by the public health authority for the island of Montreal.

We performed a simple statistical procedure known as a linear regression to establish which correlations are the strongest.

Of the 24 socio-economic factors we tested, the strongest correlation was between cases per 100,000 residents and the percentage of Black residents.

We also found strong correlations for concentrations of health-care workers, low-income earners and unsuitable housing (a measure of whether there are enough bedrooms for the size of a household).

"The pandemic has really helped to reveal some of the structural inequalities we know have been around for a long time in Montreal but haven't done anything about," said McGillUniversity Prof. Sam Harper, a social epidemiologist who reviewed CBC's findings.

A correlation study such as the one performed by CBC does not determine what factors cause the relationship, nor does it explain how several different factors may interact with each other.

Our correlation study also can't adequately represent the experiences of communities thatdon't make up significant proportions of a neighbourhood population.

The incidence of COVID-19 among Indigenous residents of the city, for instance, would likely be under-emphasized, though advocates say their social situation makes them particularly vulnerable to infection.

With these limitations in mind, it's nevertheless clear that Montreal boroughs with large Black populations have been the hardest hit by COVID-19. The correlation between cases and race was stronger for Black people than for any other visible minority.

(CBC News)

Montral-Nord, home to a large Haitian community, is the borough with the highest per capita case count on the island: 2,911 cases per 100,000 people, as of June 9.

The other hard-hit boroughs in the city Rivire-des-PrairiesPointe-aux-Trembles and LaSalle are also home to sizeable Black communities. The neighbourhood of Saint-Michel has a large Black community, too, but its COVID-19 numbers are grouped together in the borough with Villeray and Parc-Extension.

The connection between race and cases of COVID-19 is best understood alongside many of the other socio-economic characteristics of Montreal's Black community, said Will Prosper, a filmmaker and community activist in Montral-Nord.

"We have a lot of underpaid health-care workers," Prosper said. "We also have a lot of front-line workers who lack their own mode of transportation. We have lots of people who live in high-density apartments, so the risk factor is greater."

Community groups in Montral-Nord tried to warn public health officials at the outset of the pandemic that the borough was likely more vulnerable than others.

But authorities were slow to respond to those concerns, said Prosper, whose organization Hoodstock, along with other community groups, took the initiative of distributing masks and hand sanitizer.

"If they had listened to us, perhaps we would have not been impacted so significantly," Prosper said.

A link between race and rates of COVID-19 has been established elsewhere in Canada, as well.

Kate Choi, an assistant professor of sociology at Western University in London, Ont., looked at the racial makeup of health regions in Canada and also found that those with more visible minorities tend to have higher rates of infection.

"You consistently see that visible minority groups tend to have a health disadvantage," she said. "Even native-born black Canadians, after controlling for socio-economic status,race will have an impact on their health. This can be attributed to things like discrimination."

(CBC News)

There is also a strong correlation between low-income neighbourhoods and COVID-19.

The poorer, eastern part of Montreal island, including the boroughs of Montral-Nord and VilleraySaint-MichelParc-Extension, is more affected by the pandemic than central boroughs and the suburbs in Montreal's West Island, such as Pointe-Claire and Kirkland.

Income is a key driver of many other socio-economic factors, including health, a wide body of research has shown.

"Often the neighbourhoods, and the people that are most affected, are people who are already disadvantaged in terms of their social circumstances and occasionally also in terms of their underlying health conditions," said Harper, the McGill epidemiologist.

People with low incomes also tend to have jobs that can't be done from home or that don't allow for physical distancing.

Note that RosemontLa Petite-Patrie, Ville-Marie, and the Sud-Ouest borough, in central Montreal, have lower-than-average incomes but weren't affected by COVID-19 in the same way that eastern Montreal boroughs were.

As shown in the maps below, the most affected low-income boroughs have more people who work in essential services such as health care, social work and manufacturingbut who have lower rates of post-secondary education.

(CBC News)

Education is closely tied to income and is a predictor of socio-economic mobility.The higher the education level, the more job options one has, said Choi.

Areas with a higher rates of educated people, including much of Montreal's West Island, also saw fewer COVID-19 cases.

"Education is a predictor of lifelong socio-economic mobility," she said.

It's also a predictor of what kind of work you end up doing.

(CBC News)

The map above, on the left, shows the proportion of people who work in health care and social services.

The map on the right indicates the proportion of people who work in manufacturing and utilities jobs.

Neighbourhoods with a higher proportion of essential workers, in all of those sectors, showed a strong correlation to a higher rate of COVID-19 cases.

People working in those sectors are doing jobs that can't be done from home and often require sustained, close contact with others, such as stocking shelves or working as cashiers in grocery stores.

The lower-paid health care sector includes orderlies, auxiliary nurses and other staff in the province's long-term care homes, known as CHSLDs, where the virus spread unchecked.

Experts say a lack of sufficient quantities of protective equipment and inadequate training for how to use that equipment contributed to the spread of the virus, not only inside CHSLDs but in the homes and wider communities of their staff.

(CBC News)

It was initially thought that dense neighbourhoods, given the difficulty in maintaining physical distancing, would be harder hit by COVID-19.

But it appears that neighbourhood density isn't a strong predictor of the spread of the virus. The tightly packed borough of Plateau-Mont-Royal and Ville-Marie, the downtown Montreal borough, had relatively few cases.

A better predictor is unsuitable housing, according to our findings.

A greater number of cases were seen in the boroughs of Montral-Nord and Ahuntsic-Cartierville, where people tend to live in crowded households without enough bedrooms.

"These could be multi-generational households in densely populated areas," Choi said. "There is some research that shows that crowded quarters can have higher rates of infection."

With files from Alison Northcott

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