Publication Date
1-2022
Document Type
Article
Organizational Units
Sturm College of Law
Keywords
Race, Ethnicity, COVID, Vaccination rates
Abstract
The authors provide the first age-standardized race/ethnicity-specific, state-specific vaccination rates for the United States. Data encompass all states reporting race/ethnicity-specific vaccinations and reflect vaccinations through mid-October 2021, just before eligibility expanded below age 12. Using indirect age standardization, the authors compare racial/ethnic state vaccination rates with national rates. The results show that white and Black state median vaccination rates are, respectively, 89 percent and 76 percent of what would be predicted on the basis of age; Hispanic and Native rates are almost identical to what would be predicted; and Asian American/Pacific Islander rates are 110 percent of what would be predicted. The authors also find that racial/ethnic vaccination rates are associated with state politics, as proxied by 2020 Trump vote share: for each percentage point increase in Trump vote share, vaccination rates decline by 1.08 percent of what would be predicted on the basis of age. This decline is sharpest for Native American vaccinations, although these are reported for relatively few states.
Copyright Date
1-2022
Copyright Statement / License for Reuse
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Publication Statement
Copyright is held by the author. User is responsible for all copyright compliance.
Publication Title
Socius
Recommended Citation
Elizabeth Wrigley-Field, Kaitlyn M. Berry & Govind Persad, Race-Specific, State-Specific COVID-19 Vaccination Rates Adjusted for Age, 8 Socius 1 (2022).