| Literature DB >> 34518570 |
Cici Bauer1, Kehe Zhang2, Miryoung Lee3, Michelle Jones4, Arturo Rodriguez4, Isela de la Cerda3, Belinda Reininger5, Susan P Fisher-Hoch3, Joseph B McCormick3.
Abstract
COVID-19 vaccination is being rapidly rolled out in the US and many other countries, and it is crucial to provide fast and accurate assessment of vaccination coverage and vaccination gaps to make strategic adjustments promoting vaccine coverage. We reported the effective use of real-time geospatial analysis to identify barriers and gaps in COVID-19 vaccination in a minority population living in South Texas on the US-Mexico Border, to inform vaccination campaign strategies. We developed 4 rank-based approaches to evaluate the vaccination gap at the census tract level, which considered both population vulnerability and vaccination priority and eligibility. We identified areas with the highest vaccination gaps using different assessment approaches. Real-time geospatial analysis to identify vaccination gaps is critical to rapidly increase vaccination uptake, and to reach herd immunity in the vulnerable and the vaccine hesitant groups. Our results assisted the City of Brownsville Public Health Department in adjusting real-time targeting of vaccination, gathering coverage assessment, and deploying services to areas identified as high vaccination gap. The analyses and responses can be adopted in other locations.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34518570 PMCID: PMC8437959 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-97416-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Summary of COVID-19 vaccination in City of Brownsville between February 5th, 2021 (COVID-19 vaccination first became available to the region) and March 13th, 2021. At least one dose refers to either completing one or two doses of Moderna mRNA-1273 COVID-19 vaccine, or one dose of Janssen (Ad.26.COV2.S) vaccine. Complete dose refers to either completing two doses of Moderna mRNA-1273 COVID-19 vaccine, or one dose of Janssen (Ad.26.COV2.S) vaccine.
| Variable | At least one dose (n = 3743) | Complete dose (n = 2176) |
|---|---|---|
| Under 20 | 59 (1.6%) | 11 (0.5%) |
| Between 20 to 39 | 681 (18.2%) | 218 (10.0%) |
| Between 40 to 64 | 1292 (34.5%) | 537 (24.7%) |
| 65 and greater | 1711 (45.7%) | 1410 (64.8%) |
| Female | 2240 (59.8%) | 1289 (59.2%) |
| Male | 1495 (39.9%) | 869 (39.9%) |
| Missing | 8 (0.3%) | 18 (0.9%) |
| Hispanic or Latino | 2722 (72.7%) | 1790 (82.3%) |
| Not Hispanic or Latino | 169 (4.5%) | 154 (7.1%) |
| Missing | 852 (22.8%) | 232 (10.7%) |
Figure 1Maps of the census-tract level vaccination rate and vaccination priority in City of Brownsville, TX. (a): Vaccination rate per 10,000 population (February 5th–March 13th, 2021); (b): Case rate per 10,000 population (March 18th, 2020–March 13th, 2021). (c): social vulnerability index (SVI) ranked from 0 to 1; (d): COVID community vulnerability index (CCVI) ranked from 0 to 1; (e): percentage of population with 65 years old and over. The choropleth maps were created by the authors using R Studio (version 1.2.1335). URL http://www.rstudio.com/, and R package tmap.
Figure 2Maps of census tracts identified with no-gap/low/median/high vaccination gap in City of Brownsville, TX. Each panel corresponds to a different approach when assessing the gap proposed in this analysis. The choropleth maps were created by the authors using R studio (version 1.2.1335). URL http://www.rstudio.com/, and R package tmap.