KEY POINTS
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has quietly revised its estimates for the disproportionately deadly toll that Covid-19 is taking on communities of color.
  • After adjusting for age, the CDC now says Hispanic and Black Americans are shown to die at a rate of almost three times that of White Americans.
  • The agency previously said Hispanic and Black Americans were dying at a rate of about one and two times higher than Caucasians, respectively.
Family and friends place Humberto Rosales casket, who passed away from Covid-19 complications, at his gravesite at Memorial Pines Cemetery in Santa Teresa, New Mexico, on December 3, 2020.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention quietly revised its estimates for the disproportionately deadly toll that Covid-19 is taking on communities of color, now reflecting a much higher burden than previously acknowledged.

The nation's top health agency revised the analysis after Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., called on the CDC to adjust the data by age. In a November letter to CDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield, Warren said "by failing to adjust COVID-19 mortality rates by age in its public data releases, the CDC may not be providing an accurate assessment of the increased risk of death and serious illness for communities of color relative to White Americans of the same age."