Harvard Internal Medicine-Pediatrics Residency Program at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston Children's Hospital, and Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Departments of Internal Medicine.
Pediatrics. 2024 Aug 1;154(2). doi: 10.1542/peds.2024-065938.
Geographic accessibility predicts pediatric preventive care utilization, including vaccine uptake. However, spatial inequities in the pediatric coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination rollout remain underexplored. We assessed the spatial accessibility of vaccination sites and analyzed predictors of vaccine uptake.
In this cross-sectional study of pediatric COVID-19 vaccinations from the US Vaccine Tracking System as of July 29, 2022, we described spatial accessibility by geocoding vaccination sites, measuring travel times from each Census tract population center to the nearest site, and weighting tracts by their population demographics to obtain nationally representative estimates. We used quasi-Poisson regressions to calculate incidence rate ratios, comparing vaccine uptake between counties with highest and lowest quartile Social Vulnerability Index scores: socioeconomic status (SES), household composition and disability (HCD), minority status and language (MSL), and housing type and transportation.
We analyzed 15 233 956 doses administered across 27 526 sites. Rural, uninsured, white, and Native American populations experienced longer travel times to the nearest site than urban, insured, Hispanic, Black, and Asian American populations. Overall Social Vulnerability Index, SES, and HCD were associated with decreased vaccine uptake among children aged 6 months to 4 years (overall: incidence rate ratio 0.70 [95% confidence interval 0.60-0.81]; SES: 0.66 [0.58-0.75]; HCD: 0.38 [0.33-0.44]) and 5 years to 11 years (overall: 0.85 [0.77-0.95]; SES: 0.71 [0.65-0.78]; HCD: 0.67 [0.61-0.74]), whereas social vulnerability by MSL was associated with increased uptake (6 months-4 years: 5.16 [3.59-7.42]; 5 years-11 years: 1.73 [1.44-2.08]).
Pediatric COVID-19 vaccine uptake and accessibility differed by race, rurality, and social vulnerability. National supply data, spatial accessibility measurement, and place-based vulnerability indices can be applied throughout public health resource allocation, surveillance, and research.
地理位置的可达性预测了儿科预防保健的利用情况,包括疫苗接种率。然而,儿科新型冠状病毒病 2019(COVID-19)疫苗推广中的空间不平等仍然没有得到充分探索。我们评估了疫苗接种点的空间可达性,并分析了疫苗接种率的预测因素。
在这项截至 2022 年 7 月 29 日的美国疫苗跟踪系统中对儿科 COVID-19 疫苗接种的横断面研究中,我们通过地理编码疫苗接种点描述了空间可达性,测量了每个普查区人口中心到最近接种点的出行时间,并根据人口统计数据对普查区进行加权,以获得具有全国代表性的估计。我们使用拟泊松回归计算发病率比值,比较社会脆弱性指数得分最高和最低四分位数的县之间的疫苗接种率:社会经济地位(SES)、家庭构成和残疾(HCD)、少数民族和语言(MSL)以及住房类型和交通。
我们分析了在 27526 个接种点接种的 15233956 剂疫苗。农村、无保险、白人、和美洲原住民人口到达最近接种点的出行时间长于城市、有保险、西班牙裔、黑人、和亚裔美国人。总体社会脆弱性指数、SES 和 HCD 与 6 个月至 4 岁(总体:发病率比 0.70 [95%置信区间 0.60-0.81];SES:0.66 [0.58-0.75];HCD:0.38 [0.33-0.44])和 5 岁至 11 岁(总体:0.85 [0.77-0.95];SES:0.71 [0.65-0.78];HCD:0.67 [0.61-0.74])儿童的疫苗接种率降低有关,而 MSL 的社会脆弱性与接种率增加有关(6 个月-4 岁:5.16 [3.59-7.42];5 岁-11 岁:1.73 [1.44-2.08])。
儿科 COVID-19 疫苗接种率和可达性因种族、农村和社会脆弱性而异。国家供应数据、空间可达性测量和基于地点的脆弱性指数可应用于公共卫生资源分配、监测和研究。