Quote:
Originally Posted by stomachmonkey
This chart, I feel you interpret it as the percentages of a given demographic that has received the vaccine?
It breaks down the percentage of those who received the vaccine which a quick spot check of a few states lines up perfectly with each ones representation as a percentage in the given state.
Arizona
White alone, percent 82.6%
Black or African American alone, percent(a) 5.2%
American Indian and Alaska Native alone, percent(a) 5.3%
Asian alone, percent(a) 3.7%
Arkansas
White: 76.72%
Black or African American: 15.32%
Other race: 2.79%
Two or more races: 2.69%
Asian: 1.52%
Native American: 0.68%
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander: 0.29%
Idaho
White: 89.97%
Other race: 3.47%
Two or more races: 2.94%
Asian: 1.41%
Native American: 1.35%
Black or African American: 0.69%
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander: 0.16%
Georgia
White 57.8%
Black or African American 31.9%,
4.1% Asian, 3.0% Some Other Race,
0.4% Native American and Alaskan Native,
0.1% Pacific Islander and
2.7% from two or more races.
Among other things, census. We have them from time to time.
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From the "Notes" section at the bottom of the page. More individuals state notes are also available.
Percentages are based on total vaccinations for which race/ethnicity is known. Shares of vaccinations in each state may not sum to 100% due to rounding, pending, or missing data. Vaccination data may not be directly comparable due to differences in data reported, reporting periods, racial/ethnic classifications, and/or rates of unknown race/ethnicity. Where states report vaccination data for people of multiple races, we include this data in the Other category. As of 3/15, KFF only reports state-reported unknown race/ethnicity data. If a state does not report the number or share of vaccinations with unknown race/ethnicity, it is reported as NR.
States vary in whether they report total people who have received at least one vaccine dose, people who have received one dose and people who are fully vaccinated, or total vaccinations administered. Where possible, we report data for people who have received at least one vaccine dose. Some states exclude vaccinations administered through the federal long-term care partnership from their data, which affects the demographic profile of people who have received vaccinations.
Persons of Hispanic origin may be of any race. States vary in whether they include or exclude Hispanic individuals in racial categories. States also vary in their racial/ethnic classifications. For example, some states report Asian and Pacific Islander people separately while others report them as a combined group.Total population data has been adjusted to reflect a states’ racial/ethnic classifications for vaccination data