| Literature DB >> 35239636 |
Ryan Saelee, Elizabeth Zell, Bhavini Patel Murthy, Patricia Castro-Roman, Hannah Fast, Lu Meng, Lauren Shaw, Lynn Gibbs-Scharf, Terence Chorba, LaTreace Q Harris, Neil Murthy.
Abstract
Higher COVID-19 incidence and mortality rates in rural than in urban areas are well documented (1). These disparities persisted during the B.1.617.2 (Delta) and B.1.1.529 (Omicron) variant surges during late 2021 and early 2022 (1,2). Rural populations tend to be older (aged ≥65 years) and uninsured and are more likely to have underlying medical conditions and live farther from facilities that provide tertiary medical care, placing them at higher risk for adverse COVID-19 outcomes (2). To better understand COVID-19 vaccination disparities between urban and rural populations, CDC analyzed county-level vaccine administration data among persons aged ≥5 years who received their first dose of either the BNT162b2 (Pfizer-BioNTech) or mRNA-1273 (Moderna) COVID-19 vaccine or a single dose of the Ad.26.COV2.S (Janssen [Johnson & Johnson]) COVID-19 vaccine during December 14, 2020-January 31, 2022, in 50 states and the District of Columbia (DC). COVID-19 vaccination coverage with ≥1 doses in rural areas (58.5%) was lower than that in urban counties (75.4%) overall, with similar patterns across age groups and sex. Coverage with ≥1 doses varied among states: 46 states had higher coverage in urban than in rural counties, one had higher coverage in rural than in urban counties. Three states and DC had no rural counties; thus, urban-rural differences could not be assessed. COVID-19 vaccine primary series completion was higher in urban than in rural counties. However, receipt of booster or additional doses among primary series recipients was similarly low between urban and rural counties. Compared with estimates from a previous study of vaccine coverage among adults aged ≥18 years during December 14, 2020-April 10, 2021, these urban-rural disparities among those now eligible for vaccination (aged ≥5 years) have increased more than twofold through January 2022, despite increased availability and access to COVID-19 vaccines. Addressing barriers to vaccination in rural areas is critical to achieving vaccine equity, reducing disparities, and decreasing COVID-19-related illness and death in the United States (2).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35239636 PMCID: PMC8893338 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm7109a2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
COVID-19 vaccination coverage for persons aged ≥5 years who have received their first dose of the Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine or a single dose of the Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) vaccine,* by sex, age group, and urban-rural classification — United States, December 14, 2020–January 31, 2022
| Characteristic | No. (%) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Six-level urban-rural classification | Two-level urban-rural classification | |||||||
| Large central metropolitan | Large fringe metropolitan | Medium metropolitan | Small metropolitan | Micropolitan | Noncore | Urban | Rural | ||
|
|
| 76,387,928 (80.4) | 59,624,160 (76.1) | 47,054,083 (72.2) | 18,185,028 (64.4) | 15,549,920 (60.4) | 9,820,760 (55.8) | 201,251,199 (75.4) | 25,370,680 (58.5) |
|
| |||||||||
| Male |
| 36,514,502 (78.7) | 28,228,944 (73.6) | 22,236,671 (69.6) | 8,633,027 (61.9) | 7,393,069 (57.6) | 4,675,710 (52.8) | 95,613,144 (73.2) | 12,068,779 (55.7) |
| Female |
| 39,873,426 (82.0) | 31,395,216 (78.6) | 24,817,412 (74.7) | 9,552,001 (66.8) | 8,156,851 (63.2) | 5,145,050 (58.8) | 105,638,055 (77.6) | 13,301,901 (61.4) |
|
| |||||||||
| 5–11 |
| 3,007,534 (34.7) | 2,363,850 (32.5) | 1,591,017 (26.3) | 517,209 (20.4) | 373,368 (16.1) | 193,479 (12.5) | 7,479,610 (30.5) | 566,847 (14.7) |
| 12–17 |
| 5,419,083 (73.0) | 4,346,283 (65.4) | 3,203,152 (59.9) | 1,080,652 (48.5) | 866,250 (41.7) | 483,233 (34.2) | 14,049,170 (64.9) | 1,349,483 (38.7) |
| 18–64 |
| 54,096,094 (84.4) | 40,059,543 (79.1) | 30,972,242 (74.4) | 11,706,128 (65.3) | 9,782,658 (61.0) | 5,883,173 (55.7) | 136,834,007 (78.5) | 15,665,831 (58.9) |
| ≥65 |
| 13,865,217 (93.5) | 12,854,484 (93.7) | 11,287,672 (93.0) | 4,881,039 (87.6) | 4,527,644 (85.4) | 3,260,875 (80.2) | 42,888,412 (92.7) | 7,788,519 (83.2) |
* Excludes doses with state of residence reported as a territory, freely associated state, or county of residence in California with population <20,000. Completeness of county data varied by jurisdiction.
† First doses of COVID-19 vaccine were matched by county of residence to one of six urban-rural categories according to the 2013 National Center for Health Statistics Urban-Rural Classification Scheme (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_02/sr02_166.pdf). To further classify counties into two categories (urban versus rural), four of these six categories were combined into urban areas (large central metropolitan, large fringe metropolitan, medium metropolitan, and small metropolitan), and two were combined into rural areas (micropolitan and noncore).
COVID-19 vaccination coverage for persons aged ≥5 years who have received their first dose of the Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, or a single dose of the Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) vaccine, by jurisdiction* and urban-rural classification — December 14, 2020–January 31, 2022
| Jurisdiction | Vaccination coverage, no. (%) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall no. (%) with available county-level data | Six-level urban-rural classification | Two-level urban-rural classification | ||||||||
| Large central metropolitan | Large fringe metropolitan | Medium metropolitan | Small metropolitan | Micropolitan | Noncore | Urban | Rural | |||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Alabama | 2,757,503 (59.6) | 455,302 (74.2) | 221,709 (47.0) | 823,384 (66.2) | 696,028 (56.4) | 267,428 (53.9) | 293,652 (51.5) | 2,196,423 (61.6) | 561,080 (52.6) | |
| Alaska | 457,999 (68.1) | —§ | —§ | 254,919 (68.8) | 63,589 (71.6) | 35,442 (82.1) | 104,049 (61.1) | 318,508 (69.4) | 139,491 (65.4) | |
| Arizona | 4,902,381 (70.1) | 2,893,327 (67.2) | 278,396 (61.2) | 815,028 (81.1) | 628,677 (70.1) | 203,258 (85.9) | 83,695 (86.7) | 4,615,428 (69.3) | 286,953 (86.1) | |
| Arkansas | 1,648,929 (58.0) | —§ | 24,271 (55.1) | 887,427 (63.8) | 175,592 (49.6) | 282,910 (53.4) | 278,729 (53.1) | 1,087,290 (60.7) | 561,639 (53.3) | |
| California | 30,179,535 (81.6) | 19,997,305 (85.1) | 3,877,313 (78.7) | 5,036,170 (75.1) | 790,163 (70.7) | 363,889 (68.2) | 114,695 (67.3) | 29,700,951 (81.9) | 478,584 (68.0) | |
| Colorado | 4,185,782 (76.3) | 586,633 (84.6) | 1,679,502 (78.9) | 1,274,961 (76.2) | 183,689 (59.7) | 276,592 (72.7) | 184,405 (61.6) | 3,724,785 (77.5) | 460,997 (67.8) | |
| Connecticut | 3,088,922 (91.5) | 748,852 (88.9) | 259,254 (86.5) | 1,927,679 (93.4) | —§ | 153,137 (88.9) | —§ | 2,935,785 (91.6) | 153,137 (88.9) | |
| Delaware | 742,926 (79.7) | —§ | 448,379 (84.6) | 180,672 (78.6) | 113,875 (66.0) | —§ | —§ | 742,926 (79.7) | —§ | |
| District of Columbia | 640,686 (95.8) | 640,686 (95.8) | —§ | —§ | —§ | —§ | —§ | 640,686 (95.8) | —§ | |
| Florida | 15,798,256 (76.7) | 5,897,602 (82.8) | 4,508,848 (78.2) | 4,160,855 (71.2) | 854,221 (72.5) | 215,083 (61.3) | 161,647 (48.4) | 15,421,526 (77.4) | 376,730 (55.0) | |
| Georgia | 5,818,300 (57.8) | 676,861 (66.5) | 2,805,562 (59.7) | 685,239 (60.1) | 818,217 (54.8) | 470,916 (49.5) | 361,505 (47.6) | 4,985,879 (59.7) | 832,421 (48.7) | |
| Hawaii | 1,166,364 (88.2) | —§ | —§ | 833,497 (92.1) | 127,790 (80.7) | 205,077 (78.9) | —§ | 961,287 (90.4) | 205,077 (78.9) | |
| Idaho | 989,974 (57.8) | —§ | —§ | 459,601 (63.4) | 237,160 (54.1) | 227,660 (55.3) | 65,553 (47.8) | 696,761 (59.9) | 293,213 (53.4) | |
| Illinois | 9,268,865 (78.2) | 4,100,438 (85.3) | 3,117,807 (80.6) | 582,524 (68.8) | 666,813 (67.6) | 491,120 (61.4) | 310,163 (56.3) | 8,467,582 (80.6) | 801,283 (59.3) | |
| Indiana | 3,927,951 (62.0) | 591,225 (65.9) | 1,405,574 (68.3) | 582,136 (63.0) | 647,621 (59.3) | 490,631 (52.2) | 210,764 (49.1) | 3,226,556 (64.9) | 701,395 (51.3) | |
| Iowa | 1,995,392 (67.2) | —§ | —§ | 847,442 (73.0) | 438,094 (69.6) | 286,111 (62.4) | 423,745 (58.6) | 1,285,536 (71.8) | 709,856 (60.1) | |
| Kansas | 1,889,944 (69.2) | —§ | 708,348 (84.2) | 399,033 (65.6) | 285,569 (65.9) | 300,857 (60.9) | 196,137 (55.5) | 1,392,950 (74.0) | 496,994 (58.6) | |
| Kentucky | 2,679,957 (63.7) | 558,304 (77.5) | 429,089 (65.4) | 474,368 (69.0) | 247,934 (58.1) | 455,933 (56.4) | 514,329 (56.6) | 1,709,695 (68.7) | 970,262 (56.5) | |
| Louisiana | 2,641,765 (60.7) | 303,080 (82.5) | 590,214 (71.3) | 958,914 (58.3) | 437,889 (53.3) | 191,525 (52.8) | 160,143 (49.1) | 2,290,097 (62.6) | 351,668 (51.0) | |
| Maine | 1,108,287 (86.1) | —§ | —§ | 489,231 (94.5) | 198,983 (80.5) | 94,230 (80.6) | 325,843 (80.5) | 688,214 (90.0) | 420,073 (80.5) | |
| Maryland | 4,826,509 (84.7) | 418,821 (76.1) | 3,967,335 (87.9) | 215,045 (68.3) | 124,839 (71.5) | 49,943 (76.4) | 50,526 (65.3) | 4,726,040 (85.1) | 100,469 (70.4) | |
| Massachusetts | 5,706,211 (87.2) | 697,974 (91.7) | 3,659,320 (91.9) | 1,174,555 (85.1) | 113,507 (34.9) | 60,355 (71.7) | 500 (4.7) | 5,645,356 (87.6) | 60,855 (64.2) | |
| Michigan | 5,826,988 (61.9) | 1,381,910 (61.6) | 1,823,505 (64.6) | 990,899 (63.7) | 640,707 (59.3) | 626,474 (58.3) | 363,493 (57.6) | 4,837,021 (62.8) | 989,967 (58.1) | |
| Minnesota | 3,830,405 (72.1) | 1,387,321 (81.5) | 1,114,942 (69.0) | 164,688 (73.9) | 425,982 (70.7) | 416,618 (66.3) | 320,854 (59.2) | 3,092,933 (74.7) | 737,472 (63.0) | |
| Mississippi | 1,679,842 (60.3) | —§ | 162,000 (63.8) | 583,623 (63.8) | 82,810 (58.6) | 510,014 (58.7) | 341,395 (56.3) | 828,433 (63.2) | 851,409 (57.7) | |
| Missouri | 3,582,610 (61.9) | 688,006 (73.1) | 1,557,395 (69.1) | 256,709 (54.9) | 386,917 (57.1) | 333,686 (49.7) | 359,897 (46.6) | 2,889,027 (66.6) | 693,583 (48.1) | |
| Montana | 632,670 (62.0) | —§ | —§ | —§ | 228,239 (64.0) | 202,588 (62.9) | 201,843 (59.1) | 228,239 (64.0) | 404,431 (60.9) | |
| Nebraska | 1,117,283 (61.8) | —§ | —§ | 797,578 (73.1) | 53,722 (52.7) | 129,210 (42.5) | 136,773 (43.9) | 851,300 (71.3) | 265,983 (43.2) | |
| Nevada | 2,098,894 (71.1) | 1,566,670 (72.0) | —§ | 345,349 (76.1) | 40,393 (76.4) | 130,281 (54.4) | 16,201 (53.3) | 1,952,412 (72.7) | 146,482 (54.3) | |
| New Hampshire | 1,193,635 (91.6) | —§ | 393,877 (93.2) | 361,471 (91.0) | —§ | 394,069 (90.4) | 44,218 (93.2) | 755,348 (92.1) | 438,287 (90.7) | |
| New Jersey | 7,314,550 (87.4) | 1,750,970 (92.5) | 4,786,993 (86.2) | 603,833 (86.7) | 172,754 (76.7) | —§ | —§ | 7,314,550 (87.4) | —§ | |
| New Mexico | 1,604,088 (80.7) | —§ | —§ | 723,609 (82.7) | 413,490 (88.1) | 406,316 (72.9) | 60,673 (70.6) | 1,137,099 (84.6) | 466,989 (72.6) | |
| New York | 15,684,228 (86.0) | 8,401,387 (90.2) | —§ | 1,353,652 (78.8) | 627,694 (79.5) | 634,961 (69.1) | 237,481 (65.1) | 14,811,786 (87.4) | 872,442 (68.0) | |
| North Carolina | 7,803,797 (78.1) | 1,935,906 (91.3) | 956,059 (70.6) | 2,815,151 (79.9) | 657,630 (73.8) | 1,036,172 (68.7) | 402,879 (67.6) | 6,364,746 (80.7) | 1,439,051 (68.4) | |
| North Dakota | 429,616 (60.3) | —§ | —§ | —§ | 236,356 (65.4) | 88,397 (52.1) | 104,863 (57.9) | 236,356 (65.4) | 193,260 (55.1) | |
| Ohio | 6,925,142 (62.9) | 2,244,625 (71.1) | 1,540,587 (65.1) | 1,790,442 (63.5) | 241,601 (52.5) | 920,736 (51.6) | 187,151 (44.7) | 5,817,255 (66.1) | 1,107,887 (50.3) | |
| Oklahoma | 2,502,179 (67.1) | 618,215 (82.7) | 381,909 (65.1) | 695,416 (67.7) | 89,297 (75.5) | 440,229 (59.1) | 277,113 (55.1) | 1,784,837 (72.0) | 717,342 (57.5) | |
| Oregon | 3,093,299 (76.9) | 708,636 (91.4) | 903,139 (80.5) | 570,920 (73.6) | 482,396 (69.0) | 361,879 (65.8) | 66,329 (67.6) | 2,665,091 (79.0) | 428,208 (66.1) | |
| Pennsylvania | 9,420,480 (77.9) | 2,315,543 (88.2) | 3,001,055 (85.3) | 2,588,460 (74.7) | 724,186 (64.7) | 583,977 (59.2) | 207,259 (54.6) | 8,629,244 (80.4) | 791,236 (58.0) | |
| Rhode Island | 850,640 (84.8) | 494,329 (82.3) | 356,311 (88.5) | —§ | —§ | —§ | —§ | 850,640 (84.8) | —§ | |
| South Carolina | 3,115,559 (63.2) | —§ | 246,655 (61.9) | 2,108,729 (63.5) | 352,130 (69.4) | 240,259 (56.9) | 167,786 (60.3) | 2,707,514 (64.1) | 408,045 (58.3) | |
| South Dakota | 602,302 (72.4) | —§ | —§ | —§ | 315,121 (76.2) | 152,801 (69.7) | 134,380 (67.2) | 315,121 (76.2) | 287,181 (68.6) | |
| Tennessee | 3,996,653 (61.7) | 1,100,667 (72.4) | 804,507 (61.3) | 1,057,733 (64.2) | 307,777 (56.0) | 422,790 (50.9) | 303,179 (49.1) | 3,270,684 (65.0) | 725,969 (50.1) | |
| Texas | 17,422,544 (63.6) | 8,869,150 (68.5) | 3,451,074 (62.3) | 2,947,901 (68.8) | 827,824 (47.8) | 765,416 (49.9) | 561,179 (41.4) | 16,095,949 (65.7) | 1,326,595 (45.9) | |
| Utah | 2,175,366 (72.3) | 876,508 (80.8) | 45,977 (66.7) | 870,732 (70.0) | 184,278 (62.8) | 116,968 (65.5) | 80,903 (58.2) | 1,977,495 (73.5) | 197,871 (62.3) | |
| Vermont | 510,091 (85.7) | —§ | —§ | —§ | 185,762 (88.2) | 194,964 (84.5) | 129,365 (84.2) | 185,762 (88.2) | 324,329 (84.4) | |
| Virginia | 5,802,571 (71.8) | 890,652 (71.6) | 3,414,756 (76.5) | 393,085 (61.8) | 513,580 (67.8) | 142,629 (58.1) | 447,869 (60.8) | 5,212,073 (73.4) | 590,498 (60.1) | |
| Washington | 5,661,229 (78.2) | 1,936,717 (90.1) | 1,596,654 (75.5) | 971,606 (70.8) | 652,690 (74.4) | 391,498 (68.1) | 112,064 (71.4) | 5,157,667 (79.2) | 503,562 (68.8) | |
| West Virginia | 1,098,194 (64.8) | —§ | 41,649 (76.3) | 206,145 (66.3) | 462,288 (67.5) | 173,245 (62.5) | 214,867 (58.7) | 710,082 (67.6) | 388,112 (60.4) | |
| Wisconsin | 3,909,379 (71.0) | 654,306 (74.2) | 635,142 (71.5) | 793,672 (80.9) | 927,701 (69.6) | 469,365 (63.6) | 429,193 (62.6) | 3,010,821 (73.8) | 898,558 (63.1) | |
| Wyoming | 315,207 (57.5) | —§ | —§ | —§ | 101,453 (59.6) | 142,281 (62.4) | 71,473 (47.6) | 101,453 (59.6) | 213,754 (56.5) | |
* Excludes doses with state of residence reported as a territory, freely associated state, or county of residence in California with population <20,000. Completeness of county data varied by jurisdiction.
† First doses of COVID-19 vaccine were matched by county of residence to one of six urban-rural categories according to the 2013 National Center for Health Statistics Urban-Rural Classification Scheme (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_02/sr02_166.pdf). To further classify counties into two categories (urban versus rural), four of these six categories were combined into urban areas (large central metropolitan, large fringe metropolitan, medium metropolitan, and small metropolitan), and two were combined into rural areas (micropolitan and noncore).
§ State has no counties at this level of urban-rural classification.
COVID-19 vaccine series completion* and receipt of booster or additional dose among eligible population, by urban-rural classification — United States, December 14, 2020–January 31, 2022
| Characteristic | No. (%) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | Six-level urban-rural classification | Two-level urban-rural classification | |||||||
| Large central metropolitan | Large fringe metropolitan | Medium metropolitan | Small metropolitan | Micropolitan | Noncore | Urban | Rural | ||
|
| 199,221,855 (64.2) | 66,993,451 (70.5) | 52,606,393 (67.2) | 40,925,558 (62.8) | 16,107,552 (57.0) | 13,783,465 (53.6) | 8,805,436 (50.0) | 176,632,954 (66.2) | 22,588,901 (52.1) |
|
| 151,089,493 | 49,090,381 | 39,909,203 | 32,033,567 | 12,472,784 | 10,892,636 | 6,690,922 | 133,505,935 | 17,583,558 |
|
| |||||||||
| Yes | 75,983,349 (50.3) | 24,689,986 (50.3) | 20,439,141 (51.2) | 15,878,242 (49.6) | 6,244,751 (50.1) | 5,343,170 (49.1) | 3,388,059 (50.6) | 67,252,120 (50.4) | 8,731,229 (49.7) |
| No | 75,106,144 (49.7) | 24,400,395 (49.7) | 19,470,062 (48.8) | 16,155,325 (50.4) | 6,228,033 (49.9) | 5,549,466 (50.9) | 3,302,863 (49.4) | 66,253,815 (49.6) | 8,852,329 (50.3) |
* Persons aged ≥5 years who received a single dose of Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) vaccine or 2 doses of an mRNA vaccine (Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna). This includes those who received the same vaccine type for both mRNA vaccine doses, as well as those who received heterologous products for the first and second dose (e.g., Pfizer-BioNTech for first dose and Moderna for the second dose, or vice versa). Excludes doses with state of residence reported as a territory, freely associated state, or county of residence in California with population <20,000. Completeness of county data varied by jurisdiction.
† Eligible population is defined as persons aged ≥12 years who completed a primary COVID-19 vaccination series and were eligible to receive a booster or additional primary dose by the end of the analysis period, January 31, 2022. For Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, the primary series must have been completed by August 31, 2021 (i.e., ≥5 months earlier); for Janssen recipients, 1 dose must have been received by December 1, 2021 (i.e., ≥2 months earlier). Excludes residents in Texas and persons aged <18 years from Idaho.
§ Doses of COVID-19 vaccine were matched by county of residence to one of six urban-rural categories according to the 2013 National Center for Health Statistics Urban-Rural Classification Scheme (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_02/sr02_166.pdf). To further classify counties into two categories (urban versus rural), four of these six categories were combined into urban areas (large central metropolitan, large fringe metropolitan, medium metropolitan, and small metropolitan), and two were combined into rural areas (micropolitan and noncore).