Abstract

COVID-19 continues to disproportionately impact ethnic minorities across the globe in the absence of disaggregated ethnicity-based data. In Europe, governments continue to take a "colour-blind" approach to reporting COVID-19 cases and deaths, with a purported effort to avoid discrimination. However, dichotomising populations as either Black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) or White masks differences between ethnic groups by homogenising risk factors including gender, age, residential area, occupation, and socioeconomic status (SES), leading to vast oversimplification. Furthermore, in some European countries, data reported by ethnicity or birth country are limited or even non-existent, although recent reports from France and Scandinavia suggest a hugely disproportionate mortality rate in immigrants from low SES countries compared with Indigenous populations. Limited data on ethnicity in relation to COVID-19 infection and mortality restricts the understanding of causation factors and outcomes, a need, which must be addressed urgently as a public health priority.

Cite as

Chwałek, T., Greszta, A., Belisario, K., Rycroft, C., Underwood, T. & King-Okoye, M. 2021, 'COVID-19 among ethnic minorities: How missing data and colour-blind policies perpetuate inequalities in the United Kingdom and the European Union', Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Equality and Diversity, 7(1), pp. 28-35. https://www.research.ed.ac.uk/en/publications/a8b55ccb-23ff-4a79-9bbc-cb653e8f0c42

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Last updated: 28 July 2023
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