By Allison Bell | December 02, 2020 at 09:17 AM
Here are the 5 U.S. metropolitan areas where the
average of the 2019 vaccination rates for influenza and pneumococcal pneumonia
were lowest, according to Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System survey
data...
5. Memphis (Tennessee, Mississippi and
Arkansas): 59.5%
Percentage of survey participants vaccinated
against influenza: 58.4%
Percentage of survey participants over 65
vaccinated against pneumococcal pneumonia: 60.6%%
4. Idaho Falls (Idaho): 59.2%
Percentage of survey participants vaccinated
against influenza: 55.1
Percentage of survey participants over 65
vaccinated against pneumococcal pneumonia: 63.3%
3. Daytona Beach-Deltona-Ormond Beach (Florida):
57.9%
Percentage of survey participants vaccinated
against influenza: 52.5%
Percentage of survey participants over 65
vaccinated against pneumococcal pneumonia: 63.3%%
2. New York-Jersey City-White Plains (New York
and New Jersey): 57.6%
Percentage of survey participants vaccinated
against influenza: 57.4%
Percentage of survey participants over 65
vaccinated against pneumococcal pneumonia: 57.9%
1. Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach
(Florida): 55.3%
Percentage of survey participants vaccinated
against influenza: 54.1%
Percentage of survey participants over 65
vaccinated against pneumococcal pneumonia: 56.6%
The new COVID-19 vaccines could help the world — including the
financial services sector — get back to normal.
One question is how well the U.S. health care system will
distribute the vaccine, and another question is how receptive Americans will be
to getting new, rapidly developed vaccines.
One clue may to be to look at take-up rates for two
well-established vaccines against potentially deadly respiratory illnesses:
influenza and pneumococcal pneumonia.
Resources
·
Links
to 2019 BRFSS survey resources are available here.
·
An
article about state-level COVID-19 hospitalization data is available here.
Managers of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s
CDC’s Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) survey program collect
detailed data on the percentage of all BRFSS survey participants who have
been vaccinated against the flu in the past 12 months, and the percentage of
BRFSS survey participants ages 65 and older who believe they have had a
pneumonia vaccination.
For the 118 metropolitan areas in the 50 U.S. states and
the District of Columbia with both influenza and pneumonia data in the 2019
BRFSS spreadsheet, the 2019 flu vaccination rate ranged from 52.5%, in the
Daytona Beach-Deltona-Ormond Beach metropolitan statistical area, in
Florida, up to 81.8%, in the Madison, Wisconsin, metropolitan area, with a
median rate of 65.7%.
For the pneumonia vaccination, the vaccination rate for
people ages 65 and older ranged from 56.6%, in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West
Palm Beach metropolitan area, in Florida, up to 83.5%, in the Manhattan,
Kansas, area, with a median rate of 75%.
An adult vaccination index rate — the average of the flu
vaccination rate and the pneumonia vaccination rate — ranged from 55.3%,
in one metropolitan area, up to 81.5%, in Madison, Wisconsin, with a median of
81.5%.
For a look at the five metropolitan areas with the lowest
vaccination index rates — meaning that they had low vaccination rates for
both flu and pneumonia — see the slideshow above. (Wiggle your
pointer on the first slide to make the control arrows show up.)
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