LadyBeBop
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2009
- Messages
- 2,220
In MO looking at just data rates a story advised 56,720 people are overdue for their 2nd doses. Overdue is defined as within the 21 or 28 day time period. Regardless of whether you can go longer as in the grace period that's the data point they are looking at.
But the information they more looked at was poverty rates: "Zip codes with poverty rates between 20% and 24.9% showed that 8.4% of vaccine recipients were overdue second doses, while zip codes with poverty rates of 25% or more had a 6.8% overdue rate — both are higher than the state average." The state average is mentioned as "Roughly one of every 16 Missouri residents — 6.5%"
The notation however is "the overdue percentage is half the rate of the national average and only reflects the rate for currently eligible tiers rather than the entire population." But regardless looks like maybe mobile units need to hook back around? The article did mention that they encountered people who seemed surprised they needed another dose. One of the organizations that goes into vulnerable communities did say "We're going to call each person and remind them of their appointment time prior to next week." good idea IMO.
I'm not thinking this is a BIG deal at the present moment but it can certainly highlight issues arises that may have not been thought about. IMO part of the correlation they are seeing could be related to jobs in which these people didn't have any opportunity to come in for their next dose (maybe they have multiple jobs who knows), they lacked the information maybe they don't have internet or whatever to know that these vaccines require 2 doses (which I would imagine you'll find people who have all the electronics in the world and didn't know), etc.
Curious mind in me wants to know if there are any stats on race and ethnicity because I know that was being targeted too just like vulnerable areas. That might be helpful to know if they need to beef up the information train in those pockets.
Maybe your state should schedule both doses at the same time.
Here in Kentucky, they're scheduling both doses together. You can't schedule a first dose without scheduling a second dose. I'm on a couple of vaccine Facebook groups, and I hear complaint from those saying first doses are available, but they can't schedule because the second doses aren't.