I've enjoyed following vaccination data much more than case, hospitalization, and mortality data. Something positive to follow regarding the pandemic, which has been a nice change.
US shots given are up to 28.9 million, well ahead of the 26.5 million test confirmed positive Covid cases through the pandemic. Next major milestone would be seeing those fully vaccinated (two shots needed for the vaccines currently approved in the US) passing the total Covid positive number.
Texas up to 2.2 million shots given which is behind the 2.3+ million test confirmed positive Covid cases, but will pass that number soon. Texas was an early leader in vaccinations but has fallen back to about average, or even behind, if adjusting for population sizes. Only 1.4% of population fully vaccinated - slow going.
The interesting number that really led me to want to post some stats was the male vs female numbers for those in Texas who have received at least one shot. Although fatalities from Covid are 58% male and 42% female in Texas, for those with at least one vaccine shot the numbers are 40% male and 60% female. Do you think this is just driven by the disparate gender representation in the medical field (vaccine group 1A)? I'd think for those in group 1B between age 16 and 65, who have a comorbidity qualifying them for a shot, men would outnumber women quite a bit. Just struck me as interesting.
I check the Texas site (https://tabexternal.dshs.texas.gov/t/THD/views/COVID-19VaccineinTexasDashboard/Summary) and Bloomberg (https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/covid-vaccine-tracker-global-distribution/) every evening now.
US shots given are up to 28.9 million, well ahead of the 26.5 million test confirmed positive Covid cases through the pandemic. Next major milestone would be seeing those fully vaccinated (two shots needed for the vaccines currently approved in the US) passing the total Covid positive number.
Texas up to 2.2 million shots given which is behind the 2.3+ million test confirmed positive Covid cases, but will pass that number soon. Texas was an early leader in vaccinations but has fallen back to about average, or even behind, if adjusting for population sizes. Only 1.4% of population fully vaccinated - slow going.
The interesting number that really led me to want to post some stats was the male vs female numbers for those in Texas who have received at least one shot. Although fatalities from Covid are 58% male and 42% female in Texas, for those with at least one vaccine shot the numbers are 40% male and 60% female. Do you think this is just driven by the disparate gender representation in the medical field (vaccine group 1A)? I'd think for those in group 1B between age 16 and 65, who have a comorbidity qualifying them for a shot, men would outnumber women quite a bit. Just struck me as interesting.
I check the Texas site (https://tabexternal.dshs.texas.gov/t/THD/views/COVID-19VaccineinTexasDashboard/Summary) and Bloomberg (https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/covid-vaccine-tracker-global-distribution/) every evening now.
