Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago, 5841 S. Maryland Ave. MC 2007, 60637, Chicago, IL, USA.
Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Mar 25;24(1):889. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-18352-w.
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 in which vaccine rollout was primarily community-based. We aimed to evaluate the association between rates of access to primary care and community-belonging with Covid-19 vaccination within Chicago's neighborhoods.
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, 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 account for with-community association.
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.
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. Understanding how poverty, and its intersectional relation to race and primary care access, affects vaccination should be a priority for public health efforts broadly.
芝加哥根深蒂固的种族和社会经济居住隔离模式在其他主要城市中也有体现,使其成为研究全美公共卫生干预措施实施情况的典型范例。居住隔离与初级保健的可及性、社区意识以及对医疗保健系统的信任有关,这些都是应对新冠疫情等危机的重要组成部分,在疫情期间,疫苗的推广主要是基于社区。我们旨在评估芝加哥社区内获得初级保健和社区归属感与新冠疫苗接种率之间的关系。
我们分析了芝加哥公共卫生部的数据(2020 年 12 月至 2022 年 6 月),包括新冠疫苗接种率、种族/民族(%黑人和%西班牙裔/拉丁裔居民)、年龄(%>65 岁)、性别(%女性)、社会经济地位(%低于联邦贫困线)、获得所需护理的比例以及社区层面自我报告的社区归属感比例。采用线性混合模型(LMM)研究变量对疫苗接种的影响;每个社区都作为随机效应添加,以考虑社区内的关联。
芝加哥社区的新冠疫苗平均接种率为 79%,范围为 37%至 100%,中位数为 81%。我们发现,新冠疫苗接种率与获得所需护理(p<0.001)和社区归属感(p<0.001)呈正相关。接种率较低的社区,其黑人居民比例较高(p<0.0001),贫困率也较高(p<0.0001)。在模型中调整贫困、种族、性别和年龄因素后,接种率与护理或社区归属感之间的关联不再显著,但%黑人居民和贫困率仍有显著影响。
尽管获得所需的初级保健和社区归属感与接种率相关,但在控制人口统计学因素后,这种关联并不显著。贫困、种族和接种状况之间的关联仍然显著,这表明芝加哥的社会经济和种族差异会影响新冠疫苗推荐接种率,而不论护理的可及性如何。了解贫困以及其与种族和初级保健可及性的交叉关系如何影响疫苗接种,应成为公共卫生工作的重点。