TITLE:
A Community Case Study on Geographic, Environmental, and Social Health Disparities in COVID-19 Disease: Yakima, Washington
AUTHORS:
Casey Mace Firebaugh, Tishra Beeson, Amie Wojtyna, Lilian Bravo, Teresa Everson, Jaclyn Johnson, Alberto Saldana
KEYWORDS:
COVID-19, Coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, Air Quality, Hispanic/Latino, Health Disparities
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Preventive Medicine,
Vol.10 No.11,
November
30,
2020
ABSTRACT: Yakima County, Washington, a rural county with an urban core suffered disproportionately under the conditions presented by the COVID-19 pandemic and summer wildfires of 2020. With an infection rate of over 700 per 100,000 population at the height of the pandemic, the county concurrently experienced 14 consecutive days of an air quality index in the unhealthy to hazardous range in August 2020. This paper examines the contributing socioeconomic, geographic, and environmental vulnerabilities that make Yakima County particularly susceptible to the continuum of expected COVID-19 disease and related outcomes and suggests comprehensive areas of investigation to mitigate its impact on special populations, including Hispanic-Latino communities, agricultural, food production, and other essential workers.