Table 6_2_7-2b 2008 National Healthcare Quality and Disparities ReportsThe National Healthcare Quality Report (NHQR) is a comprehensive national overview of quality of health care in the United States. It is organized around four dimensions of quality of care: effectiveness, patient safety, timeliness, and patient centeredness. Table 6_2_7.2bChildren ages 19–35 months who received 1 dose of varicella vaccine, by ethnicity, United States, 2006Population groupTotalNon-HispanicHispanic, all racesAll racesWhiteBlackPercentSEPercentSEPercentSEPercentSEPercentSETotal89.30.489.20.488.80.589.21.089.80.8GenderMale89.60.589.40.588.90.688.91.590.20.9Female89.10.688.90.688.70.789.51.489.41.4Family incomeaNegative/poor88.50.886.51.183.71.989.31.590.61.0Near poor/low89.50.788.40.987.51.091.02.091.91.4Middle88.60.788.70.787.90.889.22.688.22.0High91.90.692.10.692.10.788.23.689.92.3a Negative/poor refers to household incomes below the Federal poverty line; near poor/low, over 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.Key: SE: standard error.Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Immunizations and Respiratory Diseases, and National Center for Health Statistics, National Immunization Survey. Current as of September 2009 Internet Citation: Table 6_2_7-2b: 2008 National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Reports. September 2009. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/research/findings/nhqrdr/nhqrdr08/6_maternalchildhealth/T6_2_7-2b.html