Abstract

Variation in covid-19 vaccination rates is mediated by poverty and race and not access to care: A case study in Chicago.

Grace Keegan, BS1, Mengqi Zhu2, Maria Paz1, Hyojung Kang1, Ajanta Patel, MD1 and Arshiya Baig, MD1
(1)Chicago, IL, (2)University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

APHA 2023 Annual Meeting and Expo

Background: Chicago’s deeply-rooted racial and socioeconomic residential segregation is a pattern mirrored in other major cities, making it a prototype for studying the uptake of public health interventions across the US. Residential segregation is related to availability of primary care, sense of community, and trust in the healthcare system, components which are essential in the response to crises like Covid-19.

Objectives: We aimed to evaluate the association between rates of access to primary care and community belonging with Covid-19 vaccination within Chicago’s neighborhoods.

Methods: Data from Chicago Department of Public Health (12/2020-6/2022) on Covid-19 vaccination rates, race/ethnicity (% Black and % Hispanic/Latinx residents), age (% >65), gender (% female), socioeconomic status (% below the federal poverty line), access to needed care rate, rate of households with a primary care physician, and rate of self-reported sense of community belonging on the neighborhood level were analyzed. Linear mixed models (LMMs) were used to study the impact of variables on vaccination; each neighborhood was added as a random effect to adjust for between-community variation.

Results: The average Covid-19 vaccination rates across Chicago’s neighborhoods was 79%, ranging from 37 to 100%, with median 81%. We found that Covid-19 vaccination rates were positively correlated with access to needed care (p < 0.001) and community belonging (p < 0.001). Community areas that had lower vaccination rates had greater percentage of Black residents (p < 0.0001) and greater poverty rates (p < 0.0001). After adjusting for poverty, race, gender and age in the models, the association between vaccination rates and access to care or community belonging were no longer significant, but % Black residents and poverty remained significant.

Conclusions: Though access to needed primary care and community belonging are correlated with vaccination rates, this association was not significant when controlling for demographic factors. The association between poverty, race and vaccination status remained significant, indicating that socioeconomic and racial disparities across Chicago drive Covid-19 vaccine recommendation adherence regardless of care access.

Public Heath Implications: Understanding how poverty, and its intersectional relation to race and primary care access, affects vaccination should be a priority for public health efforts broadly.

Implementation of health education strategies, interventions and programs Planning of health education strategies, interventions, and programs Protection of the public in relation to communicable diseases including prevention or control Provision of health care to the public Public health or related organizational policy, standards, or other guidelines Public health or related public policy