According to state data White Texans are being vaccinated at nearly twice the rate of Hispanic Texans and more than six times the rate of Black Texans.
Black and Hispanic Texans, who have already been disproportionately killed and hospitalized after being infected with COVID-19, appear to be vastly underrepresented among those getting shots across the state, according to state health data that still paints an incomplete picture.
The state health department’s limited demographic data distorts the picture of the disparities statewide because more than one-sixth of the records don’t include the race or ethnicity of the recipients.
The Texas Department of State Health Services recently expanded vaccine access to Texans age 50 and older and now requires providers to report racial demographic information, but local health officials and experts still say the people being vaccinated in Texas do not reflect the state’s demographics. Among the more than 5.86 million Texans vaccinated with at least one dose as of March 18, just under 41% of the recipients have been white, which is roughly in line with their proportion of the state population.
Meanwhile, Hispanics, who make up about 40% of the state’s population, account for just over 21% of people vaccinated in Texas. Black Texans, who make up about 13% of the state population, account for about 6% of people vaccinated through March 18.
The only racial or ethnic group being vaccinated at a higher rate than its population share is Asian Texans, who make up about 5% of the state’s population and roughly 6% of those vaccinated. The “other” category, which accounts for about 8% of those vaccinated, includes other races and those who identify as multiracial, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services website. Texans whose race or ethnicity is unknown account for just over 17% of people vaccinated.
DSHS has collected and published race and ethnicity data since late January, which is more than a month into the nation’s vaccination process. To better track which groups are being vaccinated officials said they would start requiring it – race and ethnicity – making it easier for users to report.
“We are getting much more complete race/ethnicity data now,” DSHS spokesperson Chris Van Deusen said in a statement, adding that the demographics of those who have received first doses administered since Feb. 4 are “much closer to the state’s 16 and older population breakdown … than we were able to see early on when we didn’t know the race or ethnicity of such a large percentage of people.”
The progress on data reported and vaccines administered has been too slow for some elected officials.
During a March 10 Texas Senate Health and Human Services Committee meeting, state Sen. Borris Miles, D-Houston, shared his frustration with the low vaccination rate among communities of color.
“I feel kind of that you broke my heart and broke your promise to me,” Miles told Imelda Garcia, DSHS associate commissioner for laboratory and infectious disease services and chair of the Expert Vaccine Allocation Panel, which makes recommendations for vaccine allocation strategies to the Texas Commissioner of Health.
Garcia acknowledged the state can “do better” to improve equity, but admitted local officials are responsible for the majority of vaccine distribution.
“At the end of the day, we can put vaccines in certain places, but it’s the locals that know their communities best,” Garcia told lawmakers during the hearing. “All we can do is give the vaccine. Where they put it, where they choose to move it, who they choose to vaccinate … is on them.”
In January, advocates for communities of color worried they would have more trouble accessing vaccines than white Texans, given that the state’s distribution centers are more common in white, affluent neighborhoods.
A University of Pittsburgh and West Health Policy Center study, done in February, showed that Texas had one of the highest concentrations of counties in which Black residents were more likely than white residents to have a driving distance of more than 10 miles to a vaccine hub. Unfortunately, this is a direct result of vaccine providers like hospitals and pharmacies being located in predominantly white, wealthy areas.
Several Texas counties have begun to employ measures to combat some of the obstacles communities of color face in getting vaccinated. To reach Black, Hispanic, and low-income populations, many cities turned to existing public health clinics, community centers, and other local institutions to sign up and vaccinate more people.
The percentage of residents fully vaccinated by county shows which areas have higher rates of immunization compared to the statewide rate.
In Dallas, where more than half of the first doses went to residents who lived in whiter and wealthier zip codes, city leaders in January tried to address inequities by prioritizing specific zip codes with vulnerable populations above others.
Many Texas counties and cities continue to focus on zip codes that are considered at risk under the Social Vulnerability Index which is a set of criteria established set by the Centers for Disease control that includes social factors like minority status, language and housing, and transportation availability.
Priority groups and various barriers contribute to inequities
In the initial months of the state’s vaccination effort, inequalities could likely be attributed to the fact that the first phase concentrated mostly on health care workers and people 65 and older, said Jamboor Vishwanatha, director of the Texas Center for Health Disparities at the University of North Texas Health Science Center.
Nationally, white people have longer lifespans on average than Black and Hispanic people, and when vaccines were prioritized for older age groups, many people of color were subsequently left out.
On top of this, technology, transportation, language, and occupational barriers have prevented many people of color from accessing doses.
Vishwanatha said although some of the disparities in vaccinating people of color were initially attributed to vaccine hesitancy, recent data shows acceptance rates are largely the same among white, Black, and Hispanic people. He said the early reports gave “the wrong notion” about the source of the disparities.
“Right now, it’s more about availability of the vaccine and access to the vaccine, particularly for people who either are homebound or have mobility issues or … are unable to take time off,” Vishwanatha said. “Right now, it’s all about how the distribution goes. As long as that evens out, [they’ll be] in a better place.”