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Results: 1 - 6 of 6
View Kirsty Duncan Profile
Lib. (ON)
Do some neighbourhoods, for example, in Toronto, have a higher test positivity rate than the 6.1% you just gave?
View Kirsty Duncan Profile
Lib. (ON)
Are different types of housing associated with different types of case growth?
David Williams
View David Williams Profile
David Williams
2020-12-10 11:26
We're finding that it was more varied where you have high neighbourhood ethnic variation and you have multi-generational families in one residence. That seems to be more of a factor than socio-economic status per se. It does play a part. We see a higher risk in lower SES as well as a much bigger difference, almost, from the quintiles of racial diversity, the lowest being around 15 per 100,000 and the highest at the moment being 170 per 100,000.
View Kirsty Duncan Profile
Lib. (ON)
David Williams
View David Williams Profile
David Williams
2020-12-10 11:27
That means when we take our data and break it down to areas that have certain definitions, from the statisticians who do it, that have quintiles of neighbourhood racial diversity in areas, under postal codes. It goes from the lowest to the highest, and so the highest quintile has a rate, at the moment, that has increased up to 170 per 100,000, from the data we have from testing that, knowing that the testing penetration varies from area to area depending on cultural issues, access to testing facilities, etc.
Results: 1 - 6 of 6

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