Overall in New York, as of Dec. 28, 21.8% of adults had received the updated vaccine, compared with 18% the same time last winter, according to survey data. Almost every state saw an increase in vaccination rates.
The increase in vaccination rates "makes complete sense to me," said Perry Halkitis, a public health psychologist and dean of the Rutgers School of Public Health in New Jersey.
The public-health messaging about the 2023 vaccine was more muddled than in 2024, when the CDC and others emphasized the newness of the updated vaccine — that it is a reformulated, more effective version, and "not just the same thing you’ve had before," he said.
"From a psychological perspective, and from a health behavior perspective, the messaging was a lot more powerful," he said.
In the past, the term "booster" was used to describe the shot, and although the CDC stopped using the term in 2023, it was still embedded in the public's minds — and "booster" implies something similar to the original, rather than something different, he said.
The increase in vaccination rates is almost entirely from the rise in vaccinations among people 65 and older, because they correctly perceive they are at higher risk for severe COVID-19, not only because their immune systems are weaker but because they are more likely to be living with chronic diseases, Halkitis said.
Dr. Leonard Krilov, an infectious disease consultant and former chairman of pediatrics at NYU Langone Hospital-Long Island in Mineola, said now that the virus is "milder in most people" than in the past, but still potentially dangerous for many older adults, health care providers may be focusing more intensely on promoting the vaccine among them, rather than trying to get all their patients vaccinated.
"It's more of a focused, targeted approach," he said.
Many younger adults "are comfortable with getting COVID," Glatt said.
"For people at low risk, that's not the end of the world," he said. "But people who are at high risk need to understand that this is still a potentially fatal disease."
COVID-19 continues to kill, but in much lower numbers than in the past.
On Long Island, 398 people died of COVID-19-related causes from Jan. 3, 2024, to Dec. 31, 2024, compared with 657 from Dec. 31, 2022, to Jan. 2, 2024, according to the state Department of Health. That’s more than 13 times fewer deaths than 2020, when nearly 5,300 people died of COVID-19 on Long Island.
Those numbers include only deaths in hospitals, nursing homes and adult-care facilities but not places like private homes, hospices or prisons.
Hospitalization numbers also are down. They increased this holiday season as in prior years, because indoor gatherings and widespread travel make it easier for the virus to spread. But the peak so far this season — 164 people in Long Island hospitals with COVID-19 on Monday, after which hospitalizations have started to slowly decline — is far lower than the peak in previous seasons. Last winter’s peak was 661 hospitalizations on Jan. 3, 2024, and three years ago, it was 2,254 on Jan. 11, 2022.
The increased vaccination rates of older adults are a factor in the decline, as are the milder strains of the virus now circulating, and previous infections with the virus, which provide a level of immunity that helps protect against severe disease, Krilov said.
"The population has some degree of protection even if it’s not absolute," he said.
The National Immunization Survey does not provide county-by-county breakdowns. New York State counts the number of vaccinations that health care providers report, but that data is an underestimate because providers are no longer required to report vaccine data for people 19 and older.
That’s why the CDC data is better for identifying vaccination trends and levels, Krilov said.
"It’s a more accurate, complete recording," he said.
The incomplete state data shows that Nassau and Suffolk each have lower COVID-19 vaccination rates than the state as a whole: 6.7% in Nassau and 6.6% in Suffolk for people of all ages, compared with 9.7% statewide, according to state data as of Tuesday.
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