Emerging Infectious Diseases (Oct 2024)

Associations between Minority Health Social Vulnerability Index Scores, Rurality, and Histoplasmosis Incidence, 8 US States

  • Dallas J. Smith,
  • Malavika Rajeev,
  • Kristina Boyd,
  • Kaitlin Benedict,
  • Ian Hennessee,
  • Laura Rothfeldt,
  • Connie Austin,
  • Mary-Elizabeth Steppig,
  • Dimple Patel,
  • Rebecca Reik,
  • Malia Ireland,
  • Judi Sedivy,
  • Suzanne Gibbons-Burgener,
  • Renee M. Calanan,
  • Samantha L. Williams,
  • Sarah Rockhill,
  • Mitsuru Toda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3010.231700
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 10
pp. 2016 – 2024

Abstract

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To explore associations between histoplasmosis and race and ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and rurality, we conducted an in-depth analysis of social determinants of health and histoplasmosis in 8 US states. Using the Minority Health Social Vulnerability Index (MH SVI), we analyzed county-level histoplasmosis incidence (cases/100,000 population) from the 8 states by applying generalized linear mixed hurdle models. We found that histoplasmosis incidence was higher in counties with limited healthcare infrastructure and access as measured by the MH SVI and in more rural counties. Other social determinants of health measured by the MH SVI tool either were not significantly or were inconsistently associated with histoplasmosis incidence. Increased awareness of histoplasmosis, more accessible diagnostic tests, and investment in rural health services could address histoplasmosis-related health disparities.

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