Health & Fitness

7,100 Virginia Lives Could Have Been Saved With COVID Vaccines: Study

While 78 percent of Virginians are fully vaccinated, the study shows that about 7,100 lives could have been saved with COVID-19 shots.

A new study shows that more than 7,100 COVID-19 deaths in Virginia could have been prevented if residents would have chosen to get the vaccines. The study says 164 deaths in the District could have been prevented.
A new study shows that more than 7,100 COVID-19 deaths in Virginia could have been prevented if residents would have chosen to get the vaccines. The study says 164 deaths in the District could have been prevented. (Ethan Duran/Patch)

VIRGINIA — More than 7,000 COVID-19 deaths in Virginia and 100 in the District of Columbia — and about 319,000 nationally — could have been prevented after vaccines became widely available early last year, according to a new analysis by health researchers.

In Virginia, some 7,123 of 15,119 COVID-19 deaths, or 1,066.4 deaths per 1 million people, could have been prevented with vaccine protection, according to the analysis published at Brown School of Public Health’s Global Epidemics website.

The study says 164 deaths in the District could have been prevented by COVID vaccinations.

Find out what's happening in Across Virginiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

A dashboard showing a state-by-state breakdown of preventable COVID-19 deaths from January 2021 through last month was released earlier this month as a descendant of the omicron variant becomes the dominant strain of the virus.

Also contributing to the analysis were researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Microsoft AI for Health.

Find out what's happening in Across Virginiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

They say their analysis shows that since vaccines became widely available, every second COVID-19 death could have been prevented.

COVID-19 has killed more than 1 million people in the United States since the first deaths were reported in 2020. Daily reports of new COVID-19 infections have increased threefold since April, according to a database maintained by The New York Times, increasing in almost every U.S. state but especially in the Northeast and Midwest.

In those regions, The Times reported, case reports now are higher than they were in advance of last summer’s delta variant surge. However, with the availability of at-home tests whose results don’t show up in official counts, the number of people with COVID-19 infections may go undercounted.

Virginia has seen 19,947 COVID cases as of June 3, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. The seven-day positivity rate has climbed from 15 to 18.1 percent as of June. 1

The rate of hospitalizations is also on the upswing, the CDC said, with new hospital admissions in Virginia at a seven-day moving average of 85.57 cases.

On average, more than 300 people a day are dying, fewer than the average of 2,600 people who died daily at the height of the omicron surge, according to The Times.

General discussion of COVID specific to your state. Talk about the case rate, hospitalizations, trends — whatever people are talking about.

In Virginia, about 78.3 percent of eligible residents are fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tracker.

Virginia residents can locate a vaccine via the Vaccinate Virginia site.

Everyone 12 and older is eligible for a booster shot, and federal health officials recommend that people 50 and older get a second booster shot. A CDC advisory panel was scheduled to meet Thursday to decide whether to recommend boosters for children ages 5-11, an age group where vaccine hesitancy is high.

Stefanie Friedhoff, a professor at Brown and one of the authors of the analysis, told National Public Radio the COVID-19 vaccine rollout was both “a remarkable success and a remarkable failure.”

The United States was the first to make vaccines available, Friedhoff said, but “did not start early on with the information campaigns about why vaccines are important.”

“We underestimated dramatically the investment it would take to get people familiarized with vaccines because, by and large, we haven't had a deadly disease like this, so people have become estranged from the important impact of vaccination,” she told NPR.

Once the vaccines were available, more lives could have been saved in the months since vaccines became available. States where the most lives could have been saved tended to have high rates of vaccine hesitancy. They are ranked by the deaths per 1 million people that could have been prevented with vaccines:

  • West Virginia: 3,350 of 5,483 deaths, or 2,337.6 deaths per 1 million people.
  • Wyoming: 938 of 1,374 deaths, or 2,109.4 deaths per 1 million people.
  • Tennessee: 11,047 of 18,98 deaths, or 2,076.7 per 1 million people.
  • Kentucky: 7,154 of 12,419 deaths, or 2,065.0 per 1 million people.
  • Oklahoma: 5,833 of 11,744 deaths, or 1,939.9 per 1 million people.

Places with high vaccine compliance had the fewest preventable deaths. They include:

  • Washington, D.C.: 164 of 548 deaths, or 284.6 per 1 million people.
  • Massachusetts: 1,957 of 7,761 deaths, or 353.4 per 1 million people.
  • Puerto Rico: 1,232 of 2,681 deaths, or 470.5 per 1 million people.
  • Vermont: 287 of 498 deaths, or 562.3 per 1 million people.
  • Hawaii: 734 of 1,128 deaths, or 657.9 per 1 million people.

» For more on the mapping project, go to National Public Radio, read the story and listen to the four-minute interview with Stefanie Friedhoff.

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