Business Standard

Minority-dominated areas score in vaccinatio­n in 17 of 27 states

- ISHAAN GERA

Since the central government announced “free for all” vaccines, the pace of vaccinatio­n has picked up. In May, India was administer­ing 2 million doses daily; and by September it was recording 7.9 million daily average doses. The free-for-all vaccinatio­n has helped bridge the social divide. A Business Standard analysis shows that in 17 of the 27 states for which data is available, districts with a larger share of Muslim population have fully vaccinated more people than those where the minority population is lower than average. For simplicity, the analysis excludes union territorie­s (except Delhi) and six territorie­s where 100 per cent of the population has received the first dose.

Ten states, however, still show a low vaccinatio­n trend for districts where the minority population is more than the average. In these areas, districts with less minority population have performed better. The analysis uses Census 2011 data to calculate the average minority population across each district. Karnataka, Kerala, Assam, Bihar, Jharkhand, Maharashtr­a and West Bengal are some states where districts with more-than-average Muslim population have a lower number of fully vaccinated people. In most of these states, districts with a more-than-average Christian population have a higher proportion of fully vaccinated population.

Though the reasons for this are not known, education could be one. Census 2011 data shows the Christian population to be more educated than the Muslim. In Gujarat, however, Muslimdomi­nated districts performed better than those dominated by Christians.

When it came to the first dose, 19 states administer­ed more doses in districts where the Muslim population is higher than average. Analysis also shows that 17 states scored higher in administer­ing the first dose in districts with a higher-than-average Christian population. For instance, when respect to the first dose, both Muslim- and Christian-dominated districts in Kerala performed better than areas where the population of minorities was lower than average. Maharashtr­a and Karnataka seem to have corrected this social divide as well. Gujarat, Jharkhand, Assam and Bihar still remain among the few states where areas with morethan-average minority population are less vaccinated than areas with lessthan-average minority population.

So, is there a strong correlatio­n between religion and vaccinatio­n? Most states do not exhibit this trend, but the analysis shows a clear pattern for some. Haryana, for instance, shows a positive correlatio­n between the proportion of Christians in the population and fully vaccinated people — higher the number of Christians, higher the number of fully vaccinated people. In Gujarat, the converse is true. Karnataka, Kerala, UP and Maharashtr­a exhibit a positive correlatio­n concerning the Christian population. For the Muslim population, Kerala and Jharkhand show a negative correlatio­n for fully vaccinated, while MP, Tamil Nadu and Telangana show a positive correlatio­n.

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