Investigation of the factors potentially responsible for the significant different prevalence of COVID-19 between African-Africans and African-Americans
Canping Chen, Wenxiu Cao, Xiaosheng Wang
AIMS Allergy and Immunology · 2021-01
Abstract
BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in more than 145 million cases and 3 million deaths as of April 23, 2021. Compared with the other continents, Africa had a relatively lower prevalence of COVID-19. However, the African-American population showed a higher COVID-19 susceptibility than the other U.S. populations.MethodsTo investigate the factors that are potentially responsible for the different susceptibility of COVID-19 between African-Africans and African-Americans, we collected the data of cumulative confirmed COVID-19 cases and deaths, temperature, humidity, wind speed, age distribution, incidences of age-related diseases, lung diseases, and HIV, and smoking rate in 40 African countries and 50 U.S. states and New York city.ResultsWe found that old age, smoking, and age-related diseases (such as cardiovascular diseases, COPD, diabetes, hypertension, neoplasms, and stroke) were potential risk factors for COVID-19, while chronic kidney disease, tuberculosis, young age, and temperature were potential protective factors.ConclusionsThe significant differences in the age distribution, incidences of age-related diseases, lung diseases, and HIV, smoking rate, temperature, and humidity could be responsible for the markedly different prevalence of COVID-19 between African-Africans and African-Americans.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- COPD
- Tuberculosis
- Demography
- Pandemic
- Diabetes mellitus
- Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
- Population
- Disease