Beginning the week of December 19–25, 2021, the B.1.1.529 (Omicron) variant of SARS-CoV-2
(the virus that causes COVID-19) became the predominant circulating variant in the
United States (i.e., accounted for >50% of sequenced isolates).* Information on the
impact that booster or additional doses of COVID-19 vaccines have on preventing hospitalizations
during Omicron predominance is limited. Data from the COVID-19–Associated Hospitalization
Surveillance Network (COVID-NET)
†
were analyzed to compare COVID-19–associated hospitalization rates among adults aged
≥18 years during B.1.617.2 (Delta; July 1–December 18, 2021) and Omicron (December
19, 2021–January 31, 2022) variant predominance, overall and by race/ethnicity and
vaccination status. During the Omicron-predominant period, weekly COVID-19–associated
hospitalization rates (hospitalizations per 100,000 adults) peaked at 38.4, compared
with 15.5 during Delta predominance. Hospitalizations rates increased among all adults
irrespective of vaccination status (unvaccinated, primary series only, or primary
series plus a booster or additional dose). Hospitalization rates during peak Omicron
circulation (January 2022) among unvaccinated adults remained 12 times the rates among
vaccinated adults who received booster or additional doses and four times the rates
among adults who received a primary series, but no booster or additional dose. The
rate among adults who received a primary series, but no booster or additional dose,
was three times the rate among adults who received a booster or additional dose. During
the Omicron-predominant period, peak hospitalization rates among non-Hispanic Black
(Black) adults were nearly four times the rate of non-Hispanic White (White) adults
and was the highest rate observed among any racial and ethnic group during the pandemic.
Compared with the Delta-predominant period, the proportion of unvaccinated hospitalized
Black adults increased during the Omicron-predominant period. All adults should stay
up to date (
1
) with COVID-19 vaccination to reduce their risk for COVID-19–associated hospitalization.
Implementing strategies that result in the equitable receipt of COVID-19 vaccinations,
through building vaccine confidence, raising awareness of the benefits of vaccination,
and removing barriers to vaccination access among persons with disproportionately
higher hospitalizations rates from COVID-19, including Black adults, is an urgent
public health priority.
COVID-NET conducts population-based surveillance for laboratory-confirmed COVID-19–associated
hospitalizations in 99 counties across 14 states.
§
COVID-19–associated hospitalizations are those occurring among residents of a predefined
surveillance catchment area who have a positive real-time reverse transcription–polymerase
chain reaction (RT-PCR) or rapid antigen detection test result for SARS-CoV-2 during
hospitalization or the 14 days preceding admission.
This analysis describes weekly hospitalization rates during Delta- and Omicron-predominant
periods. Among nonpregnant and pregnant adults aged ≥18 years,
¶
hospitalization rates were calculated overall, and by race/ethnicity and COVID-19
vaccination status. Age-adjusted rates were calculated by dividing the number of hospitalized
COVID-19 patients by population estimates for race/ethnicity, and vaccination status
in the catchment area. Vaccination status (unvaccinated, receipt of a primary series
only, or receipt of a primary series plus a booster or additional dose) was determined
for individual hospitalized patients and for the catchment population using state
immunization information systems data (
2
).** Monthly incidence among adults who received booster or additional doses was calculated
by summing the total number of COVID-19 patients with booster or additional doses
hospitalized over all days of the month and dividing by the sum of adults with booster
or additional doses in the underlying population for each day of the month.
††
This method was also used for calculations in unvaccinated persons and those who received
a primary series but not a booster or additional dose.
§§
Using previously described methods (
3
), investigators collected clinical data on a representative sample of adult patients
(7.9%) hospitalized during July 1, 2021–January 31, 2022, stratified by age and COVID-NET
site. Surveillance officers abstracted data on sampled patients from medical charts.
Pregnant women were excluded because their reasons for hospital admission (
4
) might differ from those for nonpregnant persons.
Variances were estimated using Taylor series linearization method. Chi-square tests
were used to compare differences between the Delta- and Omicron-predominant periods;
p-values <0.05 were considered statistically significant. Percentages presented were
weighted to account for the probability of selection for sampled cases (
3
). Analyses were conducted using SAS statistical software survey procedures (version
9.4; SAS Institute). This activity was reviewed by CDC and conducted consistent with
applicable federal law and CDC policy.
¶¶
During the Omicron-predominant period, overall weekly adult hospitalization rates
peaked at 38.4 per 100,000, exceeding the previous peak on January 9, 2021 (26.1)
and the peak rate during the Delta-predominant period (15.5) (Figure 1). Age-adjusted
hospitalization rates among Black adults peaked at 94.7 (January 8, 2022), higher
than that among all other racial and ethnic groups, 3.8 times the rate among White
adults (24.8) for the same week, and 2.5 times the previous peak (January 16, 2021)
among Black adults (37.2). This was the highest age-adjusted weekly rate observed
among any racial and ethnic group during the pandemic. During the Omicron-predominant
period, hospitalization rates increased among unvaccinated persons and those who completed
a primary series, with and without receipt of a booster or additional dose (Figure
2). Weekly rates among unvaccinated adults and adults who received a primary COVID-19
vaccination series with a booster or additional dose peaked at 149.8 (January 8, 2022)
and 11.7 (January 22, 2022), respectively. The cumulative monthly age-adjusted hospitalization
rate during January 2022 among unvaccinated adults (528.2) was 12 times the rates
among those who had received a booster or additional dose (45.0) and four times the
rates among adults who received a primary series, but no booster or additional dose
(133.5). The rate among adults who received a primary series, but no booster or additional
dose (133.5), was three times the rate among adults who received a booster or additional
dose (45.0).
FIGURE 1
Weekly COVID-19–associated hospitalization rates* among adults aged ≥18 years, by
race and ethnicity — COVID-19–Associated Hospitalization Surveillance Network, 14
states,
†
March 2020–January 2022
* Overall rates are unadjusted; rates presented by racial and ethnic group are age-adjusted.
†
Selected counties in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Iowa, Maryland, Michigan,
Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Tennessee, and Utah (https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6915e3.htm
). Starting the week ending December 4, 2021, Maryland data are not included in weekly
rate calculations but are included in previous weeks.
The figure is an epidemiologic curve showing the weekly COVID-19–associated hospitalization
rates among adults aged ≥18 years, using data from the COVID-19–Associated Hospitalization
Surveillance Network, in 14 states, during March 2020–January 2022.
FIGURE 2
Weekly age-adjusted rates of COVID-19–associated hospitalizations among adults aged
≥18 years, by vaccination status* — COVID-19–Associated Hospitalization Surveillance
Network, 13 states,
†
September 4, 2021–January 29, 2022
§
Abbreviation: COVID-NET = COVID-19–Associated Hospitalization Surveillance Network.
* Adults who completed a primary vaccination series were defined as those who had
received the second dose of a 2-dose primary vaccination series or a single dose of
a 1-dose product ≥14 days before a positive SARS-CoV-2 test associated with their
hospitalization but received no booster dose. Adults who received booster doses were
classified as those who completed the primary series and received an additional or
booster dose on or after August 13, 2021, at any time after completion of the primary
series, and ≥14 days before a positive test result for SARS-CoV-2, because COVID-19–associated
hospitalizations are a lagging indicator and time passed after receipt of a booster
dose has been shown to be associated with reduced rates of COVID-19 infection (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2114255).
Adults with no documented receipt of any COVID-19 vaccine dose before the test date
were considered unvaccinated.
† Selected counties in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Maryland, Michigan,
Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Tennessee, and Utah (https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6915e3.htm
). Iowa does not provide data on vaccination status.
§ Starting the week ending December 4, 2021, Maryland data are not included in weekly
rate calculations but are included in previous weeks. To ensure stability and reliability
of rates by vaccination status, data are presented beginning when 14 days have passed
since at least 5% of the population of adults aged ≥18 years in the COVID-NET surveillance
catchment area had received an additional or booster dose.
The figure is an epidemiologic curve showing weekly age-adjusted rates of COVID-19-associated
hospitalizations among adults aged ≥18 years, by vaccination status, using data from
the COVID-19–Associated Hospitalization Surveillance Network, in 13 states, during
September 4, 2021–January 29, 2022.
Clinical information was abstracted for 5,681 adults with COVID-19–associated hospitalization
during July 1, 2021–January 31, 2022 (Table). Black adults accounted for a higher
percentage of hospitalizations during the Omicron-predominant period (26.7%) than
during the Delta-predominant period (22.2%, p = 0.05). Among all adults, relative
to the Delta-predominant period, COVID-19–related illness was the primary reason for
admission for a smaller percentage of hospitalizations (87.5% versus 95.5%, p<0.01),
and median length of stay was shorter (4 versus 5 days, p<0.01) during the Omicron-predominant
period; during this period, the proportion of patients admitted to an intensive care
unit, who received invasive mechanical ventilation, and who died in-hospital decreased
significantly (all p<0.01).
TABLE
Demographic characteristics and clinical interventions and outcomes in COVID-19–associated
hospitalizations among nonpregnant adults aged ≥18 years (N = 5,681),* by vaccination
status
†
and period of SARS-CoV-2 variant predominance
§
— COVID-NET, 14 states,
¶
July 2021–January 2022
Characteristic
Variant predominance period, no. (%)
Total hospitalizations**
Vaccination status
Unvaccinated
Primary series, no booster
Primary series, plus booster
Delta (Jul 1–Dec 18)
Omicron (Dec 19–Jan 31)
p-value††
Delta (Jul 1–Dec 18)
Omicron (Dec 19–Jan 31)
Delta (Jul 1–Dec 18)
Omicron (Dec 19–Jan 31)
Delta (Jul 1–Dec 18)
Omicron (Dec 19–Jan 31)
Overall§§
4,852 (64.1)
829 (35.9)
—
3,269 (71.8)
409 (28.2)
1,183 (58.0)
255 (42.0)
45 (15.3)
93 (84.7)
Median age, yrs, (IQR)
60 (47–72)
64 (49–77)
<0.01
56 (43–67)
60 (46–77)
71 (61–80)
66 (52–78)
75 (69–82)
69 (59–79)
Age group, yrs
18–49
1,419 (28.7)
251 (25.6)
0.01
1,185 (36.6)
141 (30.3)
140 (10.1)
71 (21.1)
2 (1.3)
13 (13.2)
50–64
1,723 (30.4)
265 (26.6)
1,274 (33.7)
142 (28.8)
310 (21.2)
77 (26.3)
7 (9.5)
23 (21.1)
≥65
1,710 (40.9)
313 (47.9)
810 (29.7)
126 (40.9)
733 (68.6)
107 (52.5)
36 (89.2)
57 (65.7)
Sex
Men
2,574 (52.7)
435 (52.2)
0.83
1,751 (52.7)
225 (51.5)
610 (53.2)
127 (50.8)
21 (38.4)
50 (60.8)
Women
2,278 (47.3)
394 (47.8)
1,518 (47.3)
184 (48.5)
573 (46.8)
128 (49.2)
24 (61.6)
43 (39.2)
Race/Ethnicity
¶¶
White, non-Hispanic
2,917 (54.4)
474 (47.6)
0.05
1,852 (50.2)
222 (40.7)
817 (63.1)
137 (46.4)
41 (87.9)
71 (70.8)
Black, non-Hispanic
943 (22.2)
185 (26.7)
687 (25.2)
98 (31.0)
169 (14.9)
60 (25.5)
3 (4.7)
11 (14.8)
American Indian or Alaska Native, non-Hispanic
63 (1.5)
8 (1.0)
46 (1.5)
5 (1.5)
15 (1.9)
3 (1.0)
0 (0.0)
0 (0.0)
Asian or Pacific Islander, non-Hispanic
133 (3.6)
19 (4.6)
88 (3.4)
9 (5.4)
36 (4.6)
7 (11.8)
0 (0.0)
3 (5.9)
Hispanic
589 (12.3)
43 (8.2)
447 (13.7)
52 (12.9)
101 (9.3)
33 (11.2)
1 (7.4)
6 (7.9)
LTCF residence***
264 (5.6)
53 (7.2)
0.18
76 (2.8)
14 (4.3)
155 (12.4)
24 (9.3)
9 (18.4)
11 (10.7)
Any underlying medical condition
†††
4,195 (88.5)
729 (91.0)
0.18
2,705 (85.1)
337 (87.7)
1,126 (96.8)
242 (96.3)
44 (99.1)
84 (89.6)
Immunosuppressive condition
§§§
505 (11.0)
132 (16.9)
<0.01
240 (7.7)
45 (10.4)
215 (18.6)
50 (21.7)
18 (44.7)
26 (69.5)
Reason for admission
Likely COVID-19–related
4,487 (95.5)
712 (87.5)
<0.01
3,046 (96.3)
356 (89.5)
1,069 (93.0)
215 (85.3)
42 (94.4)
79 (85.5)
Inpatient surgery
33 (0.4)
12 (1.4)
14 (0.2)
4 (0.7)
17 (1.0)
5 (2.6)
0 (0.0)
2 (1.3)
Psychiatric admission requiring medical care
75 (1.5)
32 (3.9)
50 (1.6)
14 (3.5)
18 (1.3)
12 (4.7)
0 (0.0)
3 (5.1)
Trauma
69 (1.1)
23 (2.7)
37 (0.8)
13 (3.4)
27 (1.9)
5 (1.1)
1 (3.6)
2 (1.6)
Other
68 (1.3)
28 (4.1)
29 (0.8)
7 (2.6)
31 (2.6)
15 (6.3)
2 (2.0)
4 (5.2)
Unknown
13 (0.2)
3 (0.3)
7 (0.2)
2 (0.4)
6 (0.1)
0 (0.0)
0 (0.0)
1 (1.2)
COVID-19–related signs or symptoms on admission
¶¶¶
Yes
4,503 (95.7)
739 (91.9)
<0.01
3,072 (97.0)
368 (93.6)
1,069 (92.9)
225 (90.3)
38 (89.5)
82 (90.6)
No
244 (4.3)
73 (8.1)
113 (3.0)
29 (6.4)
98 (7.1)
27 (9.7)
7 (10.5)
9 (9.4)
Hospitalization outcome
Length of stay, days, median (IQR)
5 (3–10)
4 (2–9)
<0.01
5 (3–11)
5 (3–9)
5 (3–10)
4 (2–9)
6 (3–18)
4 (2–10)
ICU admission****,††††
1,148 (24.2)
149 (16.8)
<0.01
820 (25.3)
83 (17.4)
256 (22.7)
41 (16.1)
7 (21.1)
13 (16.8)
IMV§§§§
626 (13.6)
70 (7.6)
<0.01
467 (14.9)
36 (6.6)
124 (11.2)
21 (8.2)
5 (16.7)
6 (9.2)
In-hospital death¶¶¶¶
540 (12.6)
72 (7.0)
<0.01
385 (12.6)
42 (7.2)
123 (12.3)
19 (7.1)
5 (19.5)
7 (8.4)
Vaccination status*****
Unvaccinated
3,269 (69.5)
409 (49.4)
<0.01
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
Primary series, no booster
1,183 (25.0)
255 (32.7)
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
Primary series, plus booster
45 (1.3)
93 (13.4)
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
Days since last vaccination dose received before positive SARS-CoV-2 test result
†††††
15–60
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
19 (0.9)
3 (1.1)
22 (52.9)
23 (31.2)
61–120
NA
NA
NA
NA
88 (7.7)
14 (7.6)
11 (30.8)
45 (49.3)
121–180
NA
NA
NA
NA
336 (26.6)
20 (5.9)
2 (6.3)
12 (13.9)
>180
NA
NA
NA
NA
560 (64.9)
183 (85.4)
8 (10.0)
4 (5.5)
Abbreviations: COVID-NET = COVID-19–Associated Hospitalization Surveillance Network;
ICU = intensive care unit; IMV = invasive mechanical ventilation; LTCF = long-term
care facility; NA = not applicable.
* Data are from a weighted sample of hospitalized nonpregnant adults with completed
medical record abstractions and a discharge disposition. Sample sizes presented are
unweighted with weighted percentages.
† Vaccination status is based on state immunization information system data. Adults
who completed a primary vaccination series were persons who had received the second
dose of a 2-dose COVID-19 vaccination series or a single dose of a 1-dose product
≥14 days before a positive SARS-CoV-2 test associated with their hospitalization but
received no booster or additional dose. Adults who received booster doses were classified
as those who completed the primary series and received an additional or booster dose
on or after August 13, 2021, at any time after completion of the primary series, and
≥14 days before a positive test result for SARS-CoV-2, as COVID-19–associated hospitalizations
are a lagging indicator and time passed after receipt of a booster dose has been shown
to be associated with reduced rates of COVID-19 infection (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2114255).
Adults with a positive result whose SARS-CoV-2 test date was ≥14 days after the first
dose of a 2-dose series but <14 days after receipt of the second dose were considered
partially vaccinated. Partially vaccinated adults, and those who received a single
dose of a 1-dose product <14 days before the positive SARS-CoV-2 test result were
not included in analyses by vaccination status but were included in rates and overall
proportions that were not stratified by vaccination status. Adults with no documented
receipt of any COVID-19 vaccine dose before the test date were considered unvaccinated.
If the SARS-CoV-2 test date was not available, hospital admission date was used. Adults
whose vaccination status had not yet been verified using the immunization information
system data were considered to have unknown vaccination status and were included in
total proportions but not stratified by vaccination status. Vaccination status is
not available for Iowa and cases from Iowa are excluded from analyses that examined
vaccination status. Additional COVID-NET methods for determining vaccination status
have been described previously. https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.08.27.21262356v1
§ Delta period: July 1, 2021–December 18, 2021, reflects the time when Delta was the
predominant circulating variant; Omicron period: December 19, 2021–January 31, 2022,
reflects the time when Omicron was the predominant circulating variant.
¶ Selected counties in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Iowa, Maryland,
Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Tennessee, and Utah (https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6915e3.htm
). Iowa does not provide data on vaccination status. Starting the week ending December
4, 2021, Maryland data are not included in calculations but are included in previous
weeks.
** Total hospitalizations include data from selected counties in 14 COVID-NET states
irrespective of vaccination status and includes adults with partial or unknown vaccination
status. As a result, the number of total hospitalizations exceeds the sum of unvaccinated
adults, adults who received a primary series without a booster or additional dose,
and adults who received a primary series with a booster or additional dose.
†† Proportions between the pre-Delta and Delta period were compared using chi-square
tests; p-values <0.05 were considered statistically significant, adjusted for multiple
comparisons using the Bonferroni correction method.
§§ Percentages presented for the overall number are weighted row percentages. Percentages
presented for demographic characteristics are weighted column percentages.
¶¶ If ethnicity was unknown, non-Hispanic ethnicity was assumed. Persons with multiple,
unknown, or missing race accounted for 6.9% (weighted) of all cases. These persons
are excluded from the proportions of race/ethnicity but are included in other analyses.
*** LTCF residents include hospitalized adults who were identified as residents of
a nursing home/skilled nursing facility, rehabilitation facility, assisted living/residential
care, long-term acute care hospital, group/retirement home, or other LTCF upon hospital
admission. A free-text field for other types of residences was examined; patients
with an LTCF-type residence were also categorized as LTCF residents.
††† Defined as one or more of the following: chronic lung disease including asthma,
chronic metabolic disease including diabetes mellitus, blood disorder/hemoglobinopathy,
cardiovascular disease, neurologic disorder, immunocompromising condition, renal disease,
gastrointestinal/liver disease, rheumatologic/autoimmune/inflammatory condition, obesity,
feeding tube dependency, and wheelchair dependency.
§§§ Includes current treatment or recent diagnosis of an immunosuppressive condition
or use of an immunosuppressive therapy during the preceding 12 months.
¶¶¶ COVID-19–associated signs and symptoms included respiratory symptoms (congestion
or runny nose, cough, hemoptysis or bloody sputum, shortness of breath or respiratory
distress, sore throat, upper respiratory infection, influenza-like illness, and wheezing)
and non-respiratory symptoms (abdominal pain, altered mental status or confusion,
anosmia or decreased smell, chest pain, conjunctivitis, diarrhea, dysgeusia or decreased
taste, fatigue, fever or chills, headache, muscle aches or myalgias, nausea or vomiting,
rash, and seizures). Symptoms are abstracted from the medical chart and might not
be complete.
**** ICU admission and IMV are not mutually exclusive categories, and patients could
have received both.
†††† ICU admission status was missing in 1.3% (weighted) of hospitalizations; these
hospitalizations are included in other analyses.
§§§§ IMV status was missing in 1.4% (weighted) of hospitalizations; these hospitalizations
are otherwise included elsewhere in the analysis.
¶¶¶¶ In-hospital death status was missing in 1.4% (weighted) of hospitalizations;
these hospitalizations are otherwise included elsewhere in the analysis.
***** An additional 172 (3.4%, 95% CI = 2.7%–4.2%) adults were partially vaccinated,
69 (0.9%, 95% CI = 0.6–1.2) received a primary vaccination series <14 days before
a positive for SARS-CoV-2 test result, and 186 (4.1%) had unknown vaccination status;
these groups are not further described in this analysis.
††††† If SARS-CoV-2 test date was missing, hospitalization admission date was used.
Among 829 adults hospitalized during the Omicron-predominant period, 49.4% were unvaccinated,
compared with 69.5% during the Delta-predominant period (p<0.01). The proportion of
hospitalized adults who received booster or additional doses increased from 1.3% during
the Delta-predominant period to 13.4% during the Omicron-predominant period (p<0.01)***;
among these, 10.7% were long-term care facility residents and 69.5% had an immunosuppressive
condition.
†††
Black adults accounted for 25.2% of all unvaccinated persons hospitalized during the
Delta-predominant period; that proportion increased by 23%, to 31.0% during the Omicron-predominant
period. Relative to the Delta-predominant period, the proportion of cases in non-Hispanic
Asian or Pacific Islanders also increased, whereas the proportion in all other racial
and ethnic groups decreased. The proportion of hospitalized Black adults who received
a primary COVID-19 vaccination series with or without a booster or additional dose
increased from 4.7% and 14.9%, respectively, during the Delta-predominant period to
14.8% and 25.5%, respectively, during the Omicron-predominant period; Hispanic adults
experienced smaller increases.
Discussion
During the period of Omicron predominance, hospitalization rates increased most sharply
among Black adults in the United States relative to all other racial and ethnic groups
examined and reached the highest rate observed among all racial and ethnic groups
since the beginning of the pandemic. Relative to the Delta-predominant period, a larger
proportion of hospitalized Black adults were unvaccinated. Although hospitalization
rates increased for all adults, rates were highest among unvaccinated adults and lowest
among adults who had received a primary series and a booster or additional dose. Hospitalization
rates during peak Omicron circulation (January 2022) among unvaccinated adults remained
12 times the rates among vaccinated adults who received booster or additional doses
and four times the rates among adults who received a primary series, but no booster
or additional dose. The rate among adults who received a primary series, but no booster
or additional dose, was three times the rate among adults who received a booster or
additional dose. This is consistent with data showing the incidence of positive SARS-CoV-2
test results or death from COVID-19 is higher among unvaccinated adults and adults
who have not received a booster than among those who have received a booster or additional
dose (
5
).
Relative to the Delta-predominant period, a significantly shorter median length of
hospital stay was observed during the Omicron-predominant period and smaller proportions
of hospitalizations with intensive care unit admission, receipt of invasive mechanical
ventilation, or in-hospital death. Other studies found similarly decreased proportions
of severe outcomes among hospitalized patients with COVID-19 during this period (
6
).
§§§
The prevalence of primary COVID-19 vaccination and of receipt of a booster dose were
lower among Black adults compared with White adults. As of January 26, 2022, 39.6%
of Black persons received a primary vaccine series; of those, 43.9% of adults received
a booster dose once eligible. These proportions are lower compared with 47.3% of White
persons who received a primary series and 54.5% of eligible adults who received a
booster dose.
¶¶¶
Relative to the Delta-predominant period, Black adults accounted for a larger proportion
of unvaccinated adults during the Omicron-predominant period, and age-adjusted hospitalization
rates for Black adults increased to the highest rate among all racial and ethnic groups
for any week during the pandemic. A previous study conducted before the Omicron-predominant
period that showed increased risk for COVID-19–associated hospitalization among certain
racial and ethnic groups, including Black adults, and suggested the increased hospitalization
rates were likely multifactorial and could include increased prevalence of underlying
medical conditions, increased community-level exposure to and incidence of COVID-19,
and poor access to health care in these groups (
7
). The increase in transmissibility of the Omicron variant might have amplified these
risks for hospitalization, resulting in increased hospitalization rates among Black
adults compared with White adults, irrespective of vaccination status. Taken together,
these findings suggest that the increased risk for hospitalization among Black adults
during the Omicron-predominant period might also be due, in part, to lower proportions
of Black adults receiving both the primary vaccination series and booster doses.
The findings in this report are subject to at least four limitations. First, COVID-19–associated
hospitalizations might have been missed because of hospital testing practices and
test availability. Second, vaccination status is subject to misclassification; this
might affect estimation of rates by vaccination status. Third, because immunocompromise
status is not always known, it is not possible to distinguish between booster and
additional doses; this could have influenced observed rates. Finally, the COVID-NET
catchment areas include approximately 10% of the U.S. population; thus, these findings
might not be nationally generalizable.
Coinciding with Omicron variant predominance, COVID-19–associated hospitalization
rates among adults increased in late December 2021 and peaked in January 2022; rates
increased more among Black adults relative to rates among adults of other racial and
ethnic groups. Rates were highest among unvaccinated adults and lowest among those
who had received a booster or additional dose. All adults should stay up to date (
1
) with COVID-19 vaccination to reduce their risk for COVID-19–associated hospitalization.
Implementing strategies that result in the equitable receipt of COVID-19 vaccinations,
though building vaccine confidence, raising awareness of the benefits of vaccination,
and removing barriers to vaccination access among persons with disproportionately
higher hospitalizations rates from COVID-19, including Black adults, is an urgent
public health priority.
Summary
What is already known about this topic?
SARS-CoV-2 infections can result in COVID-19–associated hospitalizations, even among
vaccinated persons.
What is added by this report?
In January 2022, unvaccinated adults and those vaccinated with a primary series, but
no booster or additional dose, were 12 and three times as likely to be hospitalized,
respectively, as were adults who received booster or additional doses. Hospitalization
rates among non-Hispanic Black adults increased more than rates in other racial/ethnic
groups.
What are the implications for public health practice?
All adults should stay up to date with COVID-19 vaccination to reduce their risk for
COVID-19–associated hospitalization. Implementing strategies that result in the equitable
receipt of COVID-19 vaccinations among persons with disproportionately higher hospitalizations
rates, including non-Hispanic Black adults, is an urgent public health priority.