“But this is beyond the proportion that would just be in the general population,” he said. “It’s not just that there are a lot of fat people, so we’re seeing a lot of fat people who are very sick.”
Dr. Kass wrote a letter in the Lancet in April noting that many younger Covid-19 patients admitted to American hospitals suffered from obesity, and predicting that as the coronavirus spread through areas where obesity was more prevalent, more younger people would be affected.
The disparate effect on men who are obese is also understandable, he said, because of differences in fat distribution. “If you take a man and woman side by side with the same B.M.I., the male is much more likely to have the background problems that we think are a component for being more at risk,” Dr. Kass said.
To carry out the new study, researchers analyzed the health records of 6,916 members of the Kaiser Permanente Southern California Health System who were treated for Covid-19, both as inpatients and outpatients, from mid-February to May 2.
The median age of the patients was 49 years, and the mean B.M.I. of the patients was 30.6; nearly half were obese.
In general, obesity rates vary by race and ethnicity, according to the C.D.C. The age-adjusted obesity rate among Blacks is 49.6 percent, compared with 45 percent among Hispanics, 42 percent among whites and 17 percent among Asian-Americans.
Just over half of the Kaiser Permanente patients were Hispanic, about 1,000 were Asian/Asian-American, and 584 were Black. Many patients had underlying health problems that are linked to poor Covid-19 outcomes. Some 206 — or 3 percent — of the patients died within 21 days of receiving a Covid-19 diagnosis.
To figure out whether obesity, in and of itself, was associated with a higher death risk, the researchers tried to factor out conditions like high blood pressure and diabetes, which are known to be associated with more severe forms of Covid-19, as well as heart, kidney and chronic lung disease.
The scientists also wanted to know whether demographic factors, like age, sex and race or ethnicity, played a role.
While Black and Latino populations have been disproportionately stricken by the virus, with hospitalizations and deaths at higher rates, the study did not find race or ethnicity to be an independent risk factor.
The researchers did find extreme obesity to be a strong independent risk factor for worse outcomes. “We’re not saying the disparities don’t exist — we’re teasing apart what’s driving the disparities,” Dr. Tartof said.
“We see that racial and ethnic minorities are having more bad outcomes. They are also more likely to be obese, or to have less access to health care, and they’re more likely to have co-morbidities.”
Among Covid-19 patients in the study, those with extreme obesity — defined as a B.M.I. of 40 or more — were at nearly three times greater risk of dying than those of normal weight. Those with a B.M.I. of 45 were more than four times more likely to die than patients of normal weight, with the risk most striking among men and those under 60, Dr. Tartof said.
The study draws attention to the intersection of two major health concerns, Dr. Tartof said, underscoring the need for policies to tackle both.
“There is a lot of work we can do to better combat Covid, and a lot we can do to improve our strategies on obesity as well,” she said. “It is also an epidemic, and something we need to pay attention to.”
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