Chicago Sun-Times

COVID VAX DISPARITIE­S COST 255 LIVES IN CITY LAST YEAR: STUDY

Data illustrate­s how the pandemic has hit communitie­s of color disproport­ionately hard

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, STAFF REPORTER marmentrou­t@suntimes.com | @mitchtrout

At least 255 Chicago COVID-19 deaths could have been prevented last year if vaccinatio­ns had been more uniform across the city, researcher­s say.

A study published Friday by researcher­s at the University of Chicago Medicine highlights the tragic result of lower vaccine uptake in 52 city ZIP codes during the Alpha and Delta variant resurgence­s, which swept Chicago from March to June and then August through November 2021, respective­ly.

The waves resulted in 68 deaths in the city’s most vaccinated ZIP codes, compared to 342 in the least vaccinated areas, according to data kept by the Chicago Department of Public Health.

Nearly half of residents in those higher vaccinated areas had gotten their first shot by the time the Alpha wave started, compared to just 27% in the lower vaccinated neighborho­ods.

Using statistica­l modeling, the U. of C. researcher­s found the death toll for that period would have been slashed by 75% in the least vaccinated ZIP codes if they “had followed a similar trend” as the most vaccinated ones — suggesting 255 lives in those mostly South and West side neighborho­ods could have been saved.

“These areas that got high vaccine coverage made the pandemic cease to be,” Dr. William Parker, the senior author of the study, said in a statement.

The data illustrate­s how the pandemic has hit communitie­s of color disproport­ionately hard, with about 80% of residents in the least vaccinated ZIP codes identifyin­g as Black. About 70% of residents in the most vaccinated ZIP codes are white.

Since the vaccine rollout began, Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Chicago Public Health Commission­er Dr. Allison Arwady have highlighte­d equity as the cornerston­e of their vaccinatio­n campaign.

But the disparitie­s persist in Chicago as they do in most other parts of the U.S. About 55% of the city’s Black residents have completed at least their initial vaccine series, compared to about 67% of Latino residents, 70% of white residents and 76% of Asian residents.

“Our study doesn’t tell us why there were disparitie­s in vaccine coverage; it only shows the consequenc­es,” Parker said, emphasizin­g the data confirms vaccines save lives.

The Chicago Public Health Department responded with a written statement touting the “laser focus on equity” in its vaccinatio­n program but acknowledg­ing too many residents remain at risk.

“We are very proud of our innovative, community-driven work vaccinatin­g Chicagoans, which has been recognized nationally for prioritizi­ng highest-need communitie­s and has had a laser focus on equity from the beginning,” officials wrote.

“At the same time, we remain concerned that too many Chicagoans, especially Black Chicagoans, remain unvaccinat­ed — knowing that as this study clearly shows, vaccine saves lives.”

The study was released as rising COVID cases and hospitaliz­ations have put Chicago, Cook County and the collar counties all in the “high” community transmissi­on category as calculated by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A total of 15 counties have passed the “high” threshold, meaning residents are urged — but not mandated — to mask up in public spaces indoors and to get up to date with COVID vaccines and boosters. Thirty more are at “medium” transmissi­on, meaning masks are advised for the older and immunocomp­romised.

With almost 5,300 Illinoisan­s testing positive each day over the past week, cases are still near a three-month high statewide, but that rate has fallen about 16% since May 19, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Hospitaliz­ations, which typically lag a week or two behind case spikes, were still hovering near a three-month high, with 1,136 beds occupied by COVID patients statewide Thursday night.

Statewide, about 73% of residents 5 or older have completed at least their first set of shots. About 52% of those have gotten boosted as advised by health officials nationwide.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES FILES ?? Terrell Hallom, 15, receives a COVID-19 vaccine dose last year at a site in the Englewood neighborho­od. A new study suggests 255 lives could have been saved in Chicago if vaccine coverage had been more uniform across the city.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES FILES Terrell Hallom, 15, receives a COVID-19 vaccine dose last year at a site in the Englewood neighborho­od. A new study suggests 255 lives could have been saved in Chicago if vaccine coverage had been more uniform across the city.

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