The breakdown on the left is for those people who tested positive for COVID-19.

The preliminary results from the UCSF study that tested 4,160 people who live or work in the Mission District show that 95 percent of those who tested positive for COVID-19 were Latinx.

Those who tested positive were generally low-income, and 90 percent were unable to work from home. Eighty-nine percent who tested positive were earning less than $50,000 a year, and 88.4 percent were living in households of three or more people.  

Of the 4,160 people tested over four days, 1.8 percent were COVID-19-positive — or 74 people.  Of those who tested positive, 53 percent had no symptoms. In the city’s daily testing reports, the percent positive range from 3 percent to 17 percent.

“The people who tested positive were overwhelmingly going to work,” said District 9 Supervisor Hillary Ronen, adding that many might have been undocumented, without any option but to go to work. She said that “basic needs need to be met” when people are in quarantine. 

The test results seemed to confirm what city officials, community members, and researches expected: COVID-19 is disproportionately affecting low-income people of color. “As many of us know, throughout the country and here in our backyard, we’re seeing a disproportionate impact on Latinos,” said Jon Jacobo, chair of the UCSF Study Committee for the Latino Task Force for Covid-19. “We have not escaped that reality here.” 

Indeed, separate and apart from the study, 84 percent of hospitalized COVID-19 cases at ZSFG are Latinx, said Dr. Diane Havlir, a UCSF infectious disease professor who helped lead the study. Latinx residents generally make up 40 percent of ZSFG’s patient population; they comprise 15 percent of the city’s population.

Of the 73 community members who tested positive, 67 have been reached — meaning they’ve been told to isolate and will be connected to support services if needed. Just 15 of those 67 had a primary care doctor. Havlir noted the success of such a “test-to-care” system, and said it could be replicated as more testing becomes available. “If someone doesn’t know they’re infected,” she said, “they can’t do anything.”

The study is prompting Ronen to introduce legislation that will ensure that anyone who tests positive for the virus and who does not have a safe place to quarantine will receive a hotel room, as well as replacement wages if the isolation affects the person’s income. It would ensure the person receives food and supplies during the 14-day quarantine period. This kind of program would be especially helpful for undocumented individuals who have a harder time accessing government aid, and have been forced to work to put food on the table.

Initially, the test focused on census tract 229.01, one of the densest in the Mission District with among the highest Latinx populations. Researchers were able to test 2,959 residents and workers in that area, with 62 people — or 2.1 percent — testing positive. In the final day of testing, researchers extended testing to residents outside the area, testing 800 people and discovering 11 were COVID-19-positive, or 1.4 percent. Of the 401 volunteers, teachers, and “unclassified” community members who took the test, 1 tested positive. 

Researchers performed two kinds of tests on the residents: a “PCR” test, which simply determines whether someone is positive — and a serology test, which determines whether someone has been infected in the past. The results announced today only pertained to the PCR testing. The antibody test results will be available in two to three weeks, Havlir said. 

Havlir said the next study may take place in San Francisco’s Bayview-Hunters Point neighborhood.

She emphasized the importance of community-based testing, in which the community can support individuals who test positive. “We all wish we had a vaccine, we all wish we had treatment,” she said. “But we don’t right now.” 

Overall testing results.

This is a developing story and we will be updating it soon. 

In the meantime, please support our reporting. 

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Julian grew up in the East Bay and moved to San Francisco in 2014. Before joining Mission Local, he wrote for the East Bay Express, the SF Bay Guardian, and the San Francisco Business Times.

Founder/Executive Editor. I’ve been a Mission resident since 1998 and a professor emeritus at Berkeley’s J-school since 2019 when I retired. I got my start in newspapers at the Albuquerque Tribune in the city where I was born and raised. Like many local news outlets, The Tribune no longer exists. I left daily newspapers after working at The New York Times for the business, foreign and city desks. Lucky for all of us, it is still there.

As an old friend once pointed out, local has long been in my bones. My Master’s Project at Columbia, later published in New York Magazine, was on New York City’s experiment in community boards.

Right now I'm trying to figure out how you make that long-held interest in local news sustainable. The answer continues to elude me.

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12 Comments

  1. It’s worth noting that ZSFG doesn’t accept insurance. People with medical insurance will go elsewhere if possible. Given the link between race and poverty, this will skew the results of any survey taken at ZSFG towards poorer populations. So the above article should be read as confirming that the pandemic is hitting the poor hard but shouldn’t be read as meaning anything else.

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  2. So… what is the recommendation for those who are positive but have no symptoms?. Undoubtedly many are still going to go to work since they don’t feel ill and be the carriers that will infect others.

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  3. “Those who tested positive were generally low-income and 90 percent were unable to work from home. Eighty-nine percent who tested positive were earning less than $50,000 a year, and 88.4 percent were living in households of three or more people. ”

    People wonder why Detroit’s numbers are so high, and it’s basically like this picture, just on a larger scale. The #1 field of employment is healthcare, which means no option to stay at home, and with a large portion of the city being working class, many more of those jobs are considered essential compared to white collar work, and never got shut down during this.

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  4. This shows widespread testing is needed, more than have had no symptoms! Why would they stay home?
    I sure hope those who need to quarantine can get the help they need to do so.

    And the idiots partying in Dolores Park need to grow up

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  5. This shows widespread testing is needed, more than have had no symptoms! Why would they stay home?
    I sure hope those who need to quarantine can get the help they need to do so.

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    1. Oh wait I see, the *demographic stats* are based on around 2,600 people – as Mm was gettin at. And I guess the UCSF link I posted is just a summary of the report as well. Confusing but I guess the real take-away is we need better safety precautions for folks who have to go to work!

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  6. Is there some way we can help our neighbors who are positive? Do they need groceries or can we help with cost of treatment?

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  7. Am I misunderstanding something here?

    RE: “Of the 4,160 people tested over four days, 1.8 percent were COVID positive — or 74 people. Of those who tested positive, 53 percent had no symptoms. In the city’s daily testing reports, the percent positive range from 3 percent to 17 percent. ”

    How could daily percent positive range between 3 percent and 17 percent, yet the overall percent positive rate for the 4 day period be only 1.8%?

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    1. Most testing here and worldwide is still focused on people who suspect they are infected, due to symptoms or other reasons. So, the rate of infection from that population will be much higher. The importance of this study was that it was done on _everyone_ to understand the prevalence of infection regardless of this self-selection (at least in a small area).

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  8. I’m a little confused by the total number of people tested. The chart shows 2,627 or 2,594 people tested (total Sex or total Ethnicity respectively), vs a total number stated of 4,160. Also, my understanding of this study was that only a portion of Mission residents were allowed to participate, and not any workers, correct? Or did it include residents and workers within the selected area?

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  9. Looks like they caught an outbreak among workers. Hope UCSF will follow up with contact tracing! Did they report what occupations are most at risk?

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