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2009 National Healthcare Quality & Disparities Reports

Table 6_3_7.1
Children ages 19–35 months who received 1 dose of varicella vaccine,a United States, 2001 and 2007
    2007 2001
Population group Percent SE Percent SE
Total   90.0 0.4 76.3 0.4
Raceb AI/AN only 92.4 2.4 69.7 4.1
Asian only 92.8 1.8 82.3 2.1
NHOPI only DSU DSU DSU DSU
Black only 89.1 1.3 76.5 1.2
White only 89.9 0.4 76.1 0.5
Multiple races 91.2 1.3 75.6 2.2
Ethnicity Hispanic, all races 90.6 0.9 80.3 0.9
Non-Hispanic, all races 89.8 0.4 75.2 0.5
Non-Hispanic, Black 89.8 1.1 75.7 1.3
Non-Hispanic, White 89.2 0.5 74.7 0.5
Gender Male 89.6 0.6 76.7 0.6
Female 90.4 0.5 76.0 0.6
Family incomec Negative/poor 89.7 0.8 74.0 1.1
Near poor/low 88.5 0.9 74.4 0.9
Middle 89.6 0.7 75.5 0.8
High 92.2 0.8 81.7 0.8

a One or more doses of varicella at or after child's first birthday, unadjusted for history of varicella illness.

b Race categories have been changed since 2001. Data for 2001 and later years may not be comparable to data from previous years.

c Negative/poor refers to household incomes below the Federal poverty line; near poor/low, the poverty line to just below 200 percent of the poverty line; middle, 200 percent to just below 400 percent of the poverty line; and high, 400 percent of the poverty line and over.

DSU - Data do not meet the criteria for statistical reliability, data quality, or confidentiality.

Key: AI/AN: American Indian or Alaska Native; NHOPI: Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander; SE: standard error.

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, National Immunization Survey.