Coronavirus

COVID-19 is Killing Rural Americans at Twice the Rate of People in Urban Areas

The pandemic is devastating rural America, where lower vaccination rates are compounding the already limited medical care

Spencer Platt/Getty Images People attend a county fair in a city that has seen a spike in Covid infections on August 06, 2021 in Rolla, Missouri.

Rural Americans are dying of Covid at more than twice the rate of their urban counterparts — a divide that health experts say is likely to widen as access to medical care shrinks for a population that tends to be older, sicker, heavier, poorer and less vaccinated.

While the initial surge of Covid-19 deaths skipped over much of rural America, where roughly 15 percent of Americans live, nonmetropolitan mortality rates quickly started to outpace those of metropolitan areas as the virus spread nationwide before vaccinations became available, according to data from the Rural Policy Research Institute.

WATCH ANYTIME FOR FREE

>Stream NBC10 Boston news for free, 24/7, wherever you are.

Since the pandemic began, about 1 in 434 rural Americans have died from Covid, compared with roughly 1 in 513 urban Americans, the institute’s data shows. And though vaccines have reduced overall Covid death rates since the winter peak, rural mortality rates are now more than double that of urban ones — and accelerating quickly.

Read the full story on NBCNews.com.

Exit mobile version