At This Early
Stage of the COVID-19 Vaccine Roll-Out, Most Older Adults Have Not Yet
Been Vaccinated As Supply Remains Limited
With the COVID-19
vaccination rollout still in its early stages, a KFF
analysis finds that most older adults have not yet been
vaccinated against the potentially deadly virus, as vaccine supplies
remain limited and most states have only recently begun to make people 65
and older eligible.
Since January 12, the
federal government has recommended that states expand vaccine eligibility
to anyone 65 and older, beyond the initial higher-priority groups of
health care workers and long-term care residents. Twenty-nine states plus
DC have done so, according to KFF tracking.
Among the 15 states
(including DC) that have expanded to vaccinate people 65 and older and
are tracking vaccinations among this group, the share of people 65 and
older who have gotten at least one dose ranges from 34 percent in West
Virginia to 10 percent in Pennsylvania (though its data does not yet
include Philadelphia County).
Among 13 states that
report COVID-19 vaccinations for adults 60 and older, only 4 of which
have expanded vaccinations to people 65 and older, the share of people 60
and older who have received at least one dose ranges from 37 percent in
Alaska to 9 percent in Rhode Island.
The analysis is based on
data retrieved as of February 4, 2021. As states grapple with limited
vaccine supply, older adults have reportedly encountered a number of
problems such as not knowing how to schedule appointments or where to get
vaccinated, waiting in long lines, or arriving for an appointment to find
vaccines no longer available.
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