Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Gaps in vaccine rates worry experts

Northeast, South on opposite sides of geographic pattern

- By Collin Binkley, Jay Reeves and John Seewer

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — A steady crowd of people flowed into the New England Patriots’ stadium for their second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine this week in Massachuse­tts, which is nearing its goal of vaccinatin­g more than 4 million and plans to close its biggest clinics in little more than a month.

In the Deep South, meanwhile, one of the largest clinics in Alabama shut down Wednesday and others will follow in the coming weeks because demand for the shot has plunged.

“They didn’t have long enough to test it,” said James Martin, 68, explaining why he has no plans to get the vaccine as he stopped for cigarettes at a convenienc­e store in Clanton, Alabama. “They don’t know what the long-term effect is. That’s what makes me skeptical.”

A month after every adult in the U.S. became eligible for the vaccine, a distinct geographic pattern has emerged: The highest vaccinatio­n rates are concentrat­ed in the Northeast, while the lowest ones are mostly in the South.

Experts say the gap reflects a multitude of factors, including political leanings, religious beliefs, and education and income levels.

Close to 160 million Americans — 48% of the population — have received at least one dose of a COVID19 vaccine, and 125 million are fully vaccinated against the virus.

New England and Northeaste­rn states account for eight of the top 10 in vaccinatio­n rates, with Vermont No. 1 as of May 14, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Nearly 64% of its population has received as least one dose.

Following are Massachuse­tts, Hawaii, New Hampshire, Maine, Connecticu­t, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Pennsylvan­ia and New Mexico, all of them at 54% or higher.

Eight Southern states are in the bottom 10, all of which are under 40%. Mississipp­i was last at 32%, followed by Louisiana, Alabama, Wyoming, Idaho, Tennessee, Arkansas, Georgia, West Virginia and South Carolina.

Closing the gaps is vital to controllin­g the virus that has killed nearly 590,000 people in the country, health experts say. The vaccinatio­n drive has helped drive U.S. cases down to their lowest level since last June, at around 30,000 a day on average, and reduced deaths to about 570 a day, a level not seen since last July.

“Low vaccinatio­n rates will leave room for the virus to circulate, reemerge and possibly form new variants,” said Tara Kirk Sell, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. “High vaccinatio­n rates are critical to keeping the disease under control, especially when we get back to the fall and winter.”

The divides aren’t just limited to states — there are marked difference­s between urban and rural places, from county to county and from one neighborho­od to another.

The disparitie­s are even more glaring when looking at individual places around the naiton: Vermont has four counties where 75% of the residents have had at least one dose, while there are 11 Mississipp­i counties with under 25% vaccinated.

Roddy Carroll has seen both sides from where he works in technology sales in Atlanta and where he grew up in northern Georgia. “There’s a pretty stark difference,” he said.

Back home in rural Murray County, only 1 in 4 residents have rolled up their sleeves for a shot. Carroll blames conservati­ve politician­s for sowing doubts that have made people reluctant.

“They’re more willing to listen to conspiracy theorists than doctors who know how vaccines work,” he said. “You’re talking about people you’ve known all their life. But you hear them say those things, and you think, ‘How well did I know them?’ ”

Dr. Eric Topol, head of the Scripps Research Translatio­nal Institute, said the gaps in COVID-19 vaccinatio­n can be traced directly to political influences, particular­ly what he called “anti-science” attitudes among Republican leaders, who were skeptical about the value of masks, too.

Getting more people vaccinated will take continued education, incentives and “head-on” confrontat­ion of misinforma­tion, Topol said.

He expects U.S. regulators to grant full approval to the vaccines soon, which will give employers, the military and health systems the green light to require vaccinatio­n. “That will make the biggest difference,” Topol said.

Gail Borel, of Plymouth, Massachuse­tts, a nurse who arrived with her husband at Gillette Stadium on Wednesday to get their second doses, said she was initially reluctant. But she said she decided to go through with it after her employer said she could be held liable if she refused the vaccine and got patients sick.

Her husband, Tom, didn’t share her concern.

“Everybody I know just wants to get it over with. If this is the path to get it over with, then this is what we’re willing to do,” he said.

Nationwide, rural counties are behind urban places in their COVID-19 vaccinatio­n efforts — 39% of adults in rural counties had received at least one shot compared with 46% in urban counties as of April 10, according to an analysis released Tuesday by the CDC.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP ?? Kevin Fisher, of Quincy, Massachuse­tts, gets his second shot of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine Wednesday at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough.
STEVEN SENNE/AP Kevin Fisher, of Quincy, Massachuse­tts, gets his second shot of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine Wednesday at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough.

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