To learn more about who is currently eligible to receive the vaccine, where you can receive the vaccine, and how the vaccine works, visit Utah’s Coronavirus Vaccine Webpage. Data below represent all doses administered in Utah and reported to USIIS, the Utah Statewide Immunization Information System.
Definitions: People Received at Least One Dose is anyone who has received one or more doses of a two-dose vaccine (like Pfizer, Moderna, or Novavax), a one-dose vaccine (like Johnson and Johnson), or a bivalent booster whether they have completed their primary series or not. People Completed Primary Series is anyone who has completed their primary vaccine series, either two doses of a two-dose vaccine (like Pfizer, Moderna, or Novavax) or one dose of a one-dose vaccine (like Johnson and Johnson). People Received a Bivalent Booster is defined as anyone who has received the updated bivalent booster dose, regardless of if there is documentation they completed their primary series in USIIS. These categories are not mutually exclusive.
Once delivered, vaccines may take a week to be processed, scheduled, administered, and reported to the Utah Department of Health and Human Services. Of the 8,134,350 doses delivered seven days or more ago, 73% have been administered. Additionally, some doses are reserved by providers for previously scheduled second dose appointments.
Data reported in the tables and maps below represent doses that have been delivered to and administered by all providers within the local health district, not just the local health departments.
Data below are for all people who have initiated vaccination - anyone who has received one or more COVID-19 vaccine.
Data below are for all people who have initiated vaccination - anyone who has received one or more COVID-19 vaccine.
Race and Ethnicity data is self-reported by patients. DHHS collects these data from vaccine providers and reporting is optional at the federal and state level, but required, when self-reported by patients, in current state contracts for COVID-19 vaccine administration. For a breakdown of race and ethnicity data by Local Health Department, please see the DHHS Office of Health Equity Vaccination by Race/Ethnicity Weekly Report.
“Doses Delivered:” the number of vaccine doses the Utah Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) ordered from the federal government that were approved, shipped, and received. These numbers show the health jurisdiction where the healthcare provider who receives the vaccines is located. This includes all of the hospitals, healthcare facilities, local health departments, pharmacies, etc. in all of the counties within the local health jurisdiction.
“Doses Administered:” the number of vaccine doses given to Utahns so far and reported to DHHS. These numbers show the health jurisdiction where the person who got the vaccine lives. This includes people who live in all of the counties within the local health jurisdiction.
The number of people who’ve been vaccinated will likely be 7 days, or more, behind the number of vaccines that have been delivered. There will be several days between when a vaccine is delivered, given to a person, and finally reported to DHHS. There will be cases where a vaccine may be delivered to a facility located in one health jurisdiction, and given to someone who lives in a different health jurisdiction. For example, if a healthcare worker works at a hospital in Salt Lake County and is vaccinated there, but lives in Davis County, it would show the vaccine had been delivered to Salt Lake County and administered in Davis County.
“Delivered, address pending” refers to doses delivered to providers in Utah that have not been assigned to a specific local health jurisdiction yet. These include doses that were shipped to Federal partners (DOD, IHS, VA) and doses sent to recently onboarded vaccine providers.
“Provider Type” is the grouped facility type that administered a vaccine to a person, not necessarily where the person works or resides when they got a vaccine. For example, Local Health Departments are providing vaccine to healthcare workers and long term care facility residents. “Other” includes providers that don’t fit well into other categories (like mental health hospitals) or doses that have been reported with incomplete provider information.
Demographic Data: There will be small count differences in data presented by age groups and self-reported sex. This is because some vaccine administrations are not initially reported with all of these data elements and unknowns are excluded from this report.
Race & Ethnicity: As of 11/17/2021, DHHS has updated the race/ethnicity population definition to more closely align with data being collected. Race and ethnicity will now be calculated exclusively and no longer in combination. People reported with Hispanic ethnicity with any race, are grouped as “Hispanic/Latino”. Racial groupings include people who are reported with a single race alone and have not indicated Hispanic ethnicity (including those with unknown ethnicity). People who identify as two or more races of non-Hispanic or unknown ethnicity will be grouped in “Two or More Races”. This results in R/E-specific numerators and denominators being mutually exclusive as opposed to the previous method which counted each group alone or in combination. This correction to the data resulted in higher rates of testing, cases, hospitalization, deaths, and vaccination across all racial and ethnic minority populations.
Population Data: Population estimates used for calculating rates are based on 2020 National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) census estimates from IBIS. State total population estimates are as follows: Total, 3,249,879; 5+, 3,008,146; 5-11, 364,757; 12+, 2,643,389; 12-15, 216,648; 16+, 2,426,741; 18+, 2,320,603; 65+, 381,593.
Data for this report were accessed on November 02, 2023 08:39 AM.