id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-102515-ch6prsf3 Moran, Elizabeth Inequality in acute respiratory infection outcomes in the United States: A review of the literature and its implications for public health policy and practice. 2020-04-26 .txt text/plain 6507 331 43 The health disparities query identifies articles evaluating disparities in health outcomes and healthcare access with inequities in dimensions of race/ethnicity, SES, gender identity and sexual orientation, insurance status, and other populations described as "vulnerable." We then screened studies using title and abstract review to identify articles with a specific focus on all-cause ARI, ILI, RSV, and influenza. In 2009, a number of studies documented social race/ethnic outcome disparities [36] [37] [38] [39] [40] [41] , with lower SES 41 associated with increased exposure risk 36 , as well as overall incidence 37 , hospitalization 38, 39, 41 , complications 36 , and death 39,40 due to pandemic H1N1. The evidence turned up by our review, as well as the issues of racially and socioeconomic disparate exposure risks, coupled with unequal access to testing and treatment made clear by the COVID-19 pandemic, demonstrate that the principles underlying Link & Phelan's theory of SES and race as fundamental causes of health and illness apply to ARIs as much as many non-communicable diseases as well as infections more classically understood has having social antecedents, such as tuberculosis and diarrheal disease. ./cache/cord-102515-ch6prsf3.txt ./txt/cord-102515-ch6prsf3.txt