Abstract

BackgroundThe first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic hit Israel in late February 2020. The present study examines patterns of the first wave of Covid-19 morbidity in Israel at the macro level, during the period of late February to early June 2020, when the first wave has faded out. The analysis focuses on the significance of four sociodemographic variables: socioeconomic status, population density, rate of elderly population and minority status (Jewish / Arab identity) of the population in cities with 5000 residents or more. Additionally, we take a closer look into the association between morbidity rates and one SES component – home Internet access.MethodsThe article is a cross sectional study of morbidity rates, investigated on a residential community basis. Following the descriptive statistics, we move on to present multivariate analysis to explore associations between these variables and Covid-19 morbidity in Israel.ResultsBoth the descriptive statistics and regressions show morbidity rates to be positively associated with population density. Socioeconomic status as well as the size of elderly population were both significantly related to morbidity, but only in Jewish communities. Interestingly, the association was inverse in both cases. i.e., the higher the SES the lower the morbidity and the larger the elderly population, the lower the community’s morbidity. Another interesting result is that overall, morbidity rates in Jewish cities were consistently higher than in Arab communities.ConclusionsWe attribute the low morbidity rates in communities with relatively small elderly populations to the exceptionally high fertility rates in ultra-orthodox communities that sustained increased rates of morbidity; the lower morbidity in Arab communities is attributed to several factors, including the spatial Jewish-Arab segregation.

Highlights

  • Israel’s first case of Covid-19 was diagnosed on February 26, 2020

  • The present study explores morbidity rates in Israel on a residential community basis, aiming to identify associations with main sociodemographic variables, as they evolved under the lockdown practice

  • The present study focuses on four variables that have been repeatedly suggested in Israel’s public discourse, as influencing local morbidity rates: population density, socioeconomic status (SES), percentage of elderly population and minority status

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Summary

Introduction

Israel’s first case of Covid-19 was diagnosed on February 26, 2020. On March 14, 2020, 200 cases were confirmed and additional 40–60 cases were being diagnosed daily. The first wave climaxed in early April with nearly 10,000 active cases and 500–700 additional confirmed cases a day. As of early June 2020, Israel had roughly 2000 active cases, less than 300 deaths and a fatality rate of 1.67%, substantially lower than that of most West European countries and well below the world average of 6.15%.1. The present study explores morbidity rates in Israel on a residential community basis, aiming to identify associations with main sociodemographic variables, as they evolved under the lockdown practice. The first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic hit Israel in late February 2020. The present study examines patterns of the first wave of Covid-19 morbidity in Israel at the macro level, during the period of late February to early June 2020, when the first wave has faded out. We take a closer look into the association between morbidity rates and one SES component – home Internet access

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