Introduction
Vaccination is the best way to prevent illness and severe outcomes from several communicable diseases and prevent them from spreading in the community. Vaccines recommended for infants and pre-school children protect against 13 diseases: diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, measles, mumps, rubella, Haemophilus influenzae type b, rotavirus, hepatitis B, hepatitis A, varicella, polio, and pneumococcal disease. The Georgia Department of Public Health evaluated vaccine coverage for children who were aged 19 through 35 months old in 2025.
Methods
All vaccine administration records and demographic data for children born between February 01, 2022 and May 31, 2024 were obtained from the Georgia Registry of Immunization Transactions and Services (GRITS). Data cleaning removed records if they contained no childhood vaccines, were out-of-state, duplicated, created for testing, or created as a placeholder at birth, or if a child died, resulting in 286,826 records. Each record was evaluated and if all doses of a vaccine were correctly administered by 36 months, the child was considered up-to-date on (or covered by) that vaccine.
The 19-35 month age range was selected to match the ages sampled by CDC’s National Immunization Survey (NIS-Child)1.
Coverage was calculated for each of the following:
4 doses of diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis (DTaP) vaccine
2 doses of hepatitis A (Hep A) vaccine
3 doses of hepatitis B (HepB) vaccine
3 doses of Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) vaccine
3 doses inactivated polio virus (IPV) vaccine
1 dose measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine
4 doses of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV)
2 or 3 doses of rotavirus (Rota) vaccine
1 dose of varicella (Var) vaccine, and
the 7-vaccine series (4 doses DTaP, 3 doses IPV, 1 dose MMR, 3 doses HiB, 3 doses HepB, 1 dose varicella, and 4 doses PCV)
Coverage was further examined by race, ethnicity, age, insurance status, district, and county.
Key Findings
Overall, Georgia’s vaccine coverage for the complete 7-vaccine series was 75.2%. By individual vaccines, coverage was highest for pneumococcal conjugate vaccine at 91.5% and lowest for hepatitis A (HepA) at 69.3%. Coverage for the complete 7-vaccine series was highest among Asian children by race (82.1%); Hispanic or Latino children by ethnicity (76%); children aged 25 through 35 months (77.5%); and children with only private insurance (78.8%). Coverage for the complete 7-vaccine series was lowest among children of unknown race by race (67.6%); children of unknown ethnicity by ethnicity (66.8%); children aged 19 through 24 months (65.9%); and children with no insurance (42.4%).
Limitations
Some records have multiple addresses associated with them. In these cases, the first complete Georgia address was used to assign county of residence. Children may not have received their vaccines at only one address or at the address selected. In cases where there was no address, the child was assumed to be a Georgia resident and county was left as “unknown.”
The number of records assigned to a county based on GRITS address may be higher or lower than the expected population of a county based on 2025 census data. Counties bordering other states may have children who see providers out-of-state. Counties with high population immigration or emigration (e.g., counties with military bases) may appear to have lower coverage as children more frequently leave before their vaccines are completed.
Additionally, pockets of high or low coverage within or across multiple counties may be obscured by a county-level analysis.
Due to the volume of records (286,826 records), it is not feasible to individually determine correct addresses, and therefore county- and district-level coverage are estimates.
Differences from Past Studies
Previous child immunization studies used a retrospective cohort research design where children who turned two in January were sampled from each district. Identifying information was collected from electronic birth records and vaccination history was collected primarily from GRITS. If the child’s record was not up-to-date, local public health staff contacted parents, guardians, and providers to obtain any missing immunization history data.
Footnotes
1 https://www.cdc.gov/nis/about/index.html
Interacting with this Report
There are two tabs beside the “Summary.” The “Report Sections Drop-Down” tab allows navigation to different data tables. The “Maps” tab allows navigation to different county-level maps of vaccination coverage. The bar graph can be enlarged by clicking and dragging over an area then reset by double clicking. Data tables can be copied onto the clipboard, printed, or downloaded as a .csv file, an Excel file, or a PDF with their respective buttons. The search bar allows filtering data in large tables. For example, typing “1-1” in the search bar and pressing the enter key will show any rows for public health district 1-1.
Abbreviations: DTaP = diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis | IPV = inactivated polio virus | MMR = measles, mumps, rubella | HiB = Haemophilus influenzae type b | HepB = hepatitis B | Var = varicella | PCV = pneumococcal conjugate vaccine | HepA = hepatitis A | Rota = rotavirus | 7-Vaccine Series = 4 doses DTaP, 3 doses IPV, 1 dose MMR, 3 doses HiB, 3 doses HepB, 1 dose varicella, and 4 doses PCV
Abbreviations: DTaP = diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis | IPV = inactivated polio virus | MMR = measles, mumps, rubella | HiB = Haemophilus influenzae type b | HepB = hepatitis B | Var = varicella | PCV = pneumococcal conjugate vaccine | HepA = hepatitis A | Rota = rotavirus | 7-Vaccine Series = 4 doses DTaP, 3 doses IPV, 1 dose MMR, 3 doses HiB, 3 doses HepB, 1 dose varicella, and 4 doses PCV
Abbreviations: DTaP = diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis | IPV = inactivated polio virus | MMR = measles, mumps, rubella | HiB = Haemophilus influenzae type b | HepB = hepatitis B | Var = varicella | PCV = pneumococcal conjugate vaccine | HepA = hepatitis A | Rota = rotavirus | 7-Vaccine Series = 4 doses DTaP, 3 doses IPV, 1 dose MMR, 3 doses HiB, 3 doses HepB, 1 dose varicella, and 4 doses PCV
Abbreviations: DTaP = diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis | IPV =
inactivated polio virus | MMR = measles, mumps, rubella | HiB =
Haemophilus influenzae type b | HepB = hepatitis B | Var =
varicella | PCV = pneumococcal conjugate vaccine | HepA = hepatitis A |
Rota = rotavirus | 7-Vaccine Series = 4 doses DTaP, 3 doses IPV, 1 dose
MMR, 3 doses HiB, 3 doses HepB, 1 dose varicella, and 4 doses PCV
Note: Public Insurance includes Medicaid, Peachcare, and insurance
for American Indians and Native Alaskans. Private Insurance is any
non-public insurance. Insured without Vaccine Coverage is private
insurance that does not cover vaccines without charging a copayment or
coinsurance. Multiple Insurance Types indicates some vaccine doses were
covered by private insurance and some by public insurance. Any Public
Insurance indicates at least one vaccine dose was covered by public
insurance.
Abbreviations: DTaP = diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis | IPV =
inactivated polio virus | MMR = measles, mumps, rubella | HiB =
Haemophilus influenzae type b | HepB = hepatitis B | Var =
varicella | PCV = pneumococcal conjugate vaccine | HepA = hepatitis A |
Rota = rotavirus | 7-Vaccine Series = 4 doses DTaP, 3 doses IPV, 1 dose
MMR, 3 doses HiB, 3 doses HepB, 1 dose varicella, and 4 doses PCV
Note: If there is an asterisk (*) in the flag column, the number of
children assigned to the district based on GRITS is at least 20%
different than the number of expected children aged 19 through 35 months
based on 2025 population data from DPH’s Online Analytical Statistical
Information System (OASIS). This may be due to inaccurate or incomplete
address data. Interpret all district-level data as estimates.
Abbreviations: DTaP = diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis | IPV =
inactivated polio virus | MMR = measles, mumps, rubella | HiB =
Haemophilus influenzae type b | HepB = hepatitis B | Var =
varicella | PCV = pneumococcal conjugate vaccine | HepA = hepatitis A |
Rota = rotavirus | 7-Vaccine Series = 4 doses DTaP, 3 doses IPV, 1 dose
MMR, 3 doses HiB, 3 doses HepB, 1 dose varicella, and 4 doses PCV
Note: If there is an asterisk (*) in the flag column, the number of
children assigned to the county based on GRITS is at least 20% different
than the number of expected children aged 19 through 35 months based on
2025 population data from DPH’s Online Analytical Statistical
Information System (OASIS). This may be due to inaccurate or incomplete
address data. Interpret all county-level data as estimates.