Providers are retrofitting buses, holding clinics at mosques and scheduling old-school house calls to bring COVID-19 vaccine to at-risk people who otherwise might get missed in Minnesota's rapid expansion plan.
While the state this week opened vaccine access to all 4.4 million Minnesotans 16 and older, the latest data on Friday showed disparities in minority groups that have suffered higher rates of COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths and more work to do in protecting people of all races who are vulnerable because of their medical conditions.
People of color and public housing residents in south Minneapolis have struggled to gain access even though many are at elevated risk of infection and severe illness because of their front-line jobs and multigenerational homes, said Ramla Bile, a board member of the Seward Neighborhood Group, which lobbied for three vaccine clinics in local mosques next week ahead of Ramadan.
"These are people who need protecting, who should have been prioritized," she said, noting that the clinics close to those residents were needed in the absence of a state strategy to target them.
Weekly racial equity data, released Friday by the Minnesota Department of Health, showed disparities in age clusters rather than across entire minority groups. More than 73% of white, Black and Asian senior citizens had received at least a first dose of vaccine in Minnesota as of March 27, but the rate dropped to less than 60% among Hispanic and American Indian seniors.
White younger adults have raced ahead under recent expansions in vaccine supply and access — 16.9% of white people ages 16-44 have received vaccine compared with 9.8% of Black people in that age range.
An increase this month in COVID-19 activity is fueling concerns about such disparities because any remaining unvaccinated high-risk groups could suffer more hospitalizations and deaths. Nearly 82% of Minnesota seniors had received COVID-19 vaccine as of Friday — a risk group that has suffered 89% of Minnesota's 6,864 COVID-19 deaths — but death rates also have been higher among minority groups and non-elderly adults of all races with underlying health conditions.
Duane Shambour, 60, of Prior Lake lamented that vaccine access expanded to all Minnesota adults this week before he could get an appointment, despite working in a priority engineering job and having a heart condition that elevates his risk of severe COVID-19. Non-elderly adults with qualifying health conditions were added to the vaccine priority list for only 20 days last month before it was expanded to others.