Tag: COVID-19 vaccination

  • COVID vaccination hits record lull in Ohio; less than 2 in 3 are vaccinated

    COVID vaccination hits record lull in Ohio; less than 2 in 3 are vaccinated

     A Columbus Fire Department member dons gloves while working at a mass vaccination site at the Celeste Center in Columbus. Photo by Jake Zuckerman, Ohio Capital Journal.

    BY: JAKE ZUCKERMAN – Ohio Capital Journal

    Ohio’s COVID-19 vaccination campaign has hit a new lull after two months of record low numbers of residents getting vaccinated.

    While the concept of diminishing marginal returns would suggest this is to be expected, Ohio remains under-vaccinated on a national and international scale. Just 62% of state residents are vaccine-started, and 57% are vaccine completed.

    Ranked by state, Ohio is the 8th least vaccine-started in the nation and the 17th least fully-vaccinated, according to data from The New York Times. Americans nationally, despite widespread access to vaccines, are about 76% vaccine-started. That’s below a list of countries both wealthy and poor including Cuba (94%), Chile (93%), Canada (86%) and Vietnam (81%), according to Our World in Data, a global, public dataset tracking the pandemic. Ohio is about as vaccine-started as Pakistan (63%).

    While COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths are significantly down from the winter surge, vaccination is still key for the present and future. It provides powerful, direct protection to the recipient. It also, when enough people in a community are vaccinated, provides indirect protection for those who aren’t vaccinated or have weaker immune systems.

    The consequences of the low vaccination rate are simple and lethal. About 22,000 Ohioans have died of COVID-19 since Jan. 1, 2021. About 95% of them were unvaccinated. In the same period, 64,000 Ohioans were hospitalized with the disease. About 93.5% of them were unvaccinated.

    At the more local level, more than half of Ohio’s 88 counties harbor populations where less than 1 in 2 residents are vaccinated, according to an analysis of state data. These counties tend to be more rural and Appalachian.

    Like other frontiers of the pandemic, vaccination became mired in partisan politics with real human consequences. On average, former President Donald Trump won 53% of the vote share statewide in the 2020 elections. But in Ohio counties that are less than 50% vaccinated, Trump won on average 74% of the votes.

    While COVID-19 deaths concentrated in populous, urban centers early in the pandemic, the paradigm shifted after vaccines became available, according to the Pew Research Center. By late 2021, death rates in the counties Trump won most decisively were about four times those of President Joe Biden’s winningest counties.

    On a statewide basis, older Ohioans are vaccinated at significantly higher rates than their younger counterparts. For instance, those 65 and older are between 80% and 85% vaccinated. Those aged 20 to 49 are between 51% and 63% vaccinated.

     Source: Ohio Department of Health. Graph by Jake Zuckerman.

    Ohio schools require vaccination as a term of enrollment against a broad spectrum of infectious diseases like measles and chicken pox, yielding immunization coverage between about 75% to 95% depending on the disease.

    However, the conservative state legislature has signaled an unlikeliness to mandate coronavirus vaccination.

    Republicans in both chambers of the General Assembly passed legislation in 2021 blocking schools and colleges from mandating receipt of COVID-19 vaccines that are only federally approved on an emergency basis. Both the Moderna and Pfizer vaccine have since received full federal approval.

    The Ohio House passed legislation prohibiting a wide range of employers, businesses and schools from requiring receipt of any vaccine, not just the COVID-19 vaccine. The Senate has not voted on the bill.

  • COVID-19 cases leap by 900% over a month, State health department says

    COVID-19 cases leap by 900% over a month, State health department says

    A surgical mask and an N95 mask hang on display for sale at a pharmacy. Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images.

    BY: JAKE ZUCKERMAN and Ohio Capital Journal

    More than 3,000 Ohioans per day are contracting COVID-19 on average, the highest the rate has been since early February.

    Over the last month, hospitalizations increased by between 83% and 375% by age group, according to data from the Ohio Hospital Association.

    As children go back to school, more students are testing positive. Comparing the week of July 4 with the week of August 25, COVID-19 infections leapt by 909% among all Ohioans and 827% among school-age Ohioans, according to separate data from the Ohio Department of Health.

    While vaccination has modestly picked up pace, Ohio’s coverage sags well below the national average. About 52% of the state has received at least one vaccine dose, compared to 61% nationally, according to a New York Times data tracker. Only 12 states have a lower rate.

    The state’s hottest spots for infection are toward the southern border, where the vaccination rate sits between 30% and 40%.

    All told, more than 65,000 Ohioans have been hospitalized with COVID-19. More than 20,700 have died.

    “With many districts going back to school last week, the number of illnesses from Monday, Aug. 23 is troubling,” said ODH Director Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff in a news release. “As students statewide continue to return to their classrooms, this high figure should be yet another indicator to parents and families that the best protection from COVID-19 is for those 12 and older to choose to be vaccinated, and for those who aren’t vaccinated to wear masks.”

  • Free rides to COVID-related appointments

    Free rides to COVID-related appointments

    Loveland, Ohio – Clermont Transportation Connection (CTC) is offering free rides to COVID-19 vaccination, testing and doctor’s appointments within Clermont County to people age 59 and younger. Rides are available 7 AM until 6 PM, Monday-Friday.

    Call 732-7433 (ext. 2) to schedule a ride. Give your name and phone number, home address, the clinic’s address, time of appointment and expected time to be picked up from the clinic.

    People 60 and older may call Clermont Senior Services at 513-536-4115 to schedule a ride.

    CTC received an Ohio Department of Transportation grant through its Rides to Community Immunity program offered throughout the state

  • Where you can go in Clermont County to get the COVID-19 vaccination

    Where you can go in Clermont County to get the COVID-19 vaccination

    Submitted by Clermont County Public Health

    Where can you get vaccinated?

    Under Ohio’s vaccine plan, older adults can receive the vaccine according to the following schedule.

    January 18 – Ohioans 80 years of age and older
    January 25 – ages 75 and older and those with severe congenital or developmental disabilities
    February 1 – ages 70 and older
    February 8 – ages 65 and older.

    Clermont County has several vaccine providers in the county where you can make an appointment.

    HealthSource of Ohio
    register online at www.healthsourceofohio.org
    or call 513-732-5081

    Kroger pharmacy
    register online at www.kroger.com/ohiocovidvaccine
    or call 866-211-5320

    Meijer pharmacy
    to register, text COVID to 75049 or visit https://clinic.meijer.com/
    or call the pharmacy directly for assistance registering
    Miami Township Meijer – 513-576-5510
    Eastgate Meijer – 513-943-5710

    Mercy Health – Clermont Hospital
    call 1-866-624-0366 to schedule an appointment

    Clermont County Public Health
    to get on the waiting list and be contacted when an appointment is available, visit: https://ccphohio.org/covid-19-vaccine-info/ For assistance signing up for the waiting list or questions about COVID-19, call the Clermont County COVID-19 hotline at 513-735-8500.