Haro-Ramos Alein Y, Bacong Adrian M, Rodriguez Hector P
Division of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California.
Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
AJPM Focus. 2023 Jun;2(2):100072. doi: 10.1016/j.focus.2023.100072. Epub 2023 Feb 1.
Racial-ethnic disparities in COVID-19 vaccination are well documented. The extent to which racism, manifested at the individual and ZIP code levels, explains disparities in early vaccination uptake remains unclear.
Data from a statewide poll of California registered voters (N=10,256), conducted between April 29 and May 5, 2021, linked to area-level resource data, were analyzed. Weighted multivariable logistic regression models examined racial disparities in COVID-19 vaccination. Decomposition analyses quantified how much of the observed racial disparities in vaccination were explained by racial discrimination and social disadvantage (i.e., educational attainment, 2019 household income, and ZIP code social vulnerability).
Latinx (64.6%) and Black (66.7%) adults were less likely to have at least 1 COVID-19 vaccine dose by April or May 2021 than White adults (74.7%). In adjusted analyses, Latinx (AOR=0.69, 95% CI=0.57, 0.84) and Black (AOR=0.51, 95% CI=0.37, 0.70) adults had a lower likelihood of being vaccinated than Whites. Social disadvantage accounted for 77.4% (<0.05) and 35.8% (<0.05) of the explainable variation in Latinx-White and Black-White disparities, respectively. Self-reported racial discrimination was not associated with COVID-19 vaccination in adjusted analyses.
Social disadvantage but not self-reported racial discrimination explained racial-ethnic disparities in COVID-19 vaccination in California. Removing resource-related barriers may help to increase the relatively low COVID-19 vaccination rates among Black and Latinx populations.
新冠病毒疫苗接种方面的种族差异已有充分记录。在个体和邮政编码层面表现出来的种族主义在多大程度上解释了早期疫苗接种率的差异仍不清楚。
对2021年4月29日至5月5日期间进行的一项加利福尼亚州登记选民的全州民意调查(N = 10256)数据进行分析,这些数据与地区层面的资源数据相关联。加权多变量逻辑回归模型研究了新冠病毒疫苗接种中的种族差异。分解分析量化了观察到的疫苗接种种族差异中有多少可由种族歧视和社会劣势(即教育程度、2019年家庭收入和邮政编码社会脆弱性)来解释。
到2021年4月或5月,拉丁裔(64.6%)和黑人(66.7%)成年人至少接种一剂新冠病毒疫苗的可能性低于白人成年人(74.7%)。在调整分析中,拉丁裔(优势比=0.69,95%置信区间=0.57,0.84)和黑人(优势比=0.51,95%置信区间=0.37,0.70)成年人接种疫苗的可能性低于白人。社会劣势分别占拉丁裔与白人、黑人与白人差异中可解释变异的77.4%(<0.05)和35.8%(<0.05)。在调整分析中,自我报告的种族歧视与新冠病毒疫苗接种无关。
社会劣势而非自我报告的种族歧视解释了加利福尼亚州新冠病毒疫苗接种中的种族差异。消除与资源相关的障碍可能有助于提高黑人和拉丁裔人群相对较低的新冠病毒疫苗接种率。