"How" is probably due to larger household sizes, more intergenerational, and higher bf%
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I don't think they're allowed to say "lose weight" anymore.
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In their study they’re computing rates as percentages of tests. So since white/Asian people are getting tested more for various reasons, there’s a racial disparity in the positivity/hospitalization rates of the tested.
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There's also the role of vitamin D that several papers indicate is important for the outcome of the infection. If those black and latino communities live in the north they have to be paying special attention to their sun exposure or supplementation.
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Vitamin D is the going hypothesis, but another one I've been mulling over is that Covidshaming on social media is less likely to scare those populations into hiding under the bed.
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Idk, but just watched a NYC vid of a black guy beat another black guy unconscious, using a club, and no one in frame was wearing a mask.
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Maybe the return to investment is larger if you help disadvantaged populations. Save more lives with the same amount of doctors and medicine. If a hispanic life is cheaper to save, and it's worth one vote just like a white one, you don't have to be an EA to take advantage.
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I understand the investment part, where I would spend money, but what's the "return" part? how does that help me? I suggest that if it's worth doing, the affected people can/should do it.
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