Quantifying inequities in COVID-19 vaccine distribution over time by social vulnerability, race and ethnicity, and location: A population-level analysis in St. Louis and Kansas City, Missouri.
Aaloke ModyCory BradleySalil RedkarBranson FoxIngrid Eshun-WilsonMatifadza G HlatshwayoAnne TrolardKhai Hoan TramLindsey M FiliatreauFranda ThomasMatt HaslamGeorge TurabelidzeVetta L Sanders ThompsonWilliam G PowderlyElvin Hsing GengPublished in: PLoS medicine (2022)
Inequities in the initial COVID-19 vaccination and booster rollout in 2 large US metropolitan areas were apparent across racial/ethnic communities, across levels of social vulnerability, over time, and across types of vaccination administration sites. Disparities in receipt of the primary vaccine series attenuated over time during a period in which sites of vaccination administration diversified, but were recapitulated during booster rollout. These findings highlight how public health strategies from the outset must directly target these deeply embedded structural and systemic determinants of disparities and track equity metrics over time to avoid perpetuating inequities in healthcare access.