Previous analyses have
shown that the pandemic has had a disproportionate impact on people of
color and that Black and Hispanic people are receiving smaller shares
of COVID-19 vaccinations compared to their shares of cases and deaths
and to their shares of the overall population. The brief, Vaccination
is Local: COVID-19 Vaccination Rates Vary by County and Key
Characteristics, provides further insight into these equity
issues. Counties with higher shares of Black people have a vaccination
rate of 13.7% compared to 16.4% for counties with low shares of Black
people. The population vaccination rate in counties with higher shares
of Hispanic people is 15% versus 15.9% for counties with lower shares
of Hispanic people.
The analysis also
examines how county vaccination rates align with CDC prioritization
recommendations and ensuing state decisions. With all states
prioritizing older adults, counties with higher shares of people age 65
and older have an 18.2% vaccination rate compared to 14.9% in counties
with lower shares of the population.
However, while many
states are prioritizing individuals with certain high-risk medical
conditions, counties with higher shares of people with certain
high-risk conditions have a lower vaccination rate compared to counties
with lower shares of people with these conditions (14% versus 16.7%).
Other findings from
the analysis include:
- Higher
county uninsured and poverty rates are associated with lower
vaccination rates.
- Metro
counties have lower vaccination rates for the total population
than non-metro counties.
- Rates
are lower in counties that voted for Donald Trump compared to
those that voted for Joe Biden.
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