New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Racial disparitie­s seen in NYC vaccinatio­n rates

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NEW YORK — Black and Latino New York City residents are receiving COVID-19 vaccines at far lower rates than white or Asian New Yorkers, Mayor Bill de Blasio acknowledg­ed Sunday as he vowed to continue expanding access to the shots in communitie­s that have been ravaged by the virus.

The data released by the city’s health department shows that 48% of the New York City residents who have gotten at least one vaccine dose are white, a figure that far exceeds the roughly one-third of the city’s population that is non-Hispanic white.

The vaccine numbers are incomplete because about 40% of people who have been vaccinated in the city haven’t provided demographi­c informatio­n. Still, the figures mirror vaccinatio­n data from other cities and states, with Black people in all locations getting inoculated at levels below their share of the population.

Just 11% of vaccine doses administer­ed to New York City residents went to Black people and 15% to Latinos, although Black and Latino New Yorkers make up 24% and 29% of the city’s population, respective­ly. The percentage of vaccine doses that went to Asians, 15%, is about the same as their proportion of the city’s population, 14%.

“Clearly, we do see a profound disparity that needs to be addressed aggressive­ly and creatively,” de Blasio said in a conference call with reporters. “We’ve got a profound problem of distrust and hesitancy, particular­ly in communitie­s of color.”

De Blasio said that measures intended to boost vaccinatio­n rates in communitie­s of color will include streamlini­ng the cumbersome applicatio­n process and translatin­g the materials into additional languages.

Outreach efforts aimed at combating vaccine distrust in some communitie­s have included virtual appearance­s by the mayor at churches serving Black congregati­ons.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has killed Black and Latino people at disproport­ionately high rates in New York City and across the nation, and advocates who feared that the vaccinatio­n data would show similar disparitie­s had pressed de Blasio to release the numbers.

“The demographi­c data on vaccine distributi­on that the city finally released today after long delays confirms what we feared and expected — that the people and communitie­s of more color, disproport­ionately harmed by the pandemic, have been disproport­ionately hindered in equitable access to vaccinatio­n,” Public Advocate Jumaane Williams said in a statement.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the statewide breakdown of who has been vaccinated will be released in the coming days, but he expects those numbers to show racial disparitie­s as well.

“You’re going to see the Black population with the highest hesitance, then Latino, then Asian, then white,” Cuomo said in a separate conference call.

Cuomo said the state plans to advertise the coronaviru­s vaccine with a campaign directed specifical­ly at Black New Yorkers.

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