Paid sick leave provides workers with paid time off to receive COVID-19 vaccines and to recover from potential vaccine adverse effects. We hypothesized that US cities with paid sick leave would have higher COVID-19 vaccination coverage and narrower coverage disparities than those without such policies. Using county-level vaccination data and paid sick leave data from thirty-seven large US cities in 2021, we estimated the association between city-level paid sick leave policies and vaccination coverage in the working-age population and repeated the analysis using coverage in the population ages sixty-five and older as a negative control. We also examined associations by neighborhood social vulnerability. Cities with a paid sick leave policy had 17 percent higher vaccination coverage than cities without such a policy. We found stronger associations between paid sick leave and vaccination in the most socially vulnerable neighborhoods compared with the least socially vulnerable ones, and no association in the population ages sixty-five and older. Paid sick leave policies are associated with higher COVID-19 vaccination coverage and narrower coverage disparities. Increasing access to these policies may help increase vaccination and reduce inequities in coverage. (author abstract)
Higher COVID-19 vaccination and narrower disparities in U.S. cities with paid sick leave compared to those without
Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Bilal, Usama
S. Schnake-Mahl, Alina
O'Leary, Gabriella
Mullachery, Pricila
Skinner, Alexandra
Kolker, Jennifer
Diez Roux, Ana V.
Raifman, Julia
Publisher
Health Affairs
Date
November 2022
Publication
COVID-19 Economic Supports and More
Abstract / Description
Artifact Type
Application
Reference Type
Journal Article
Topic Area
Illness/Disease/Injury/Wellbeing » Vaccines » Vaccine Access and Uptake
Policy and Practice » Policy & Law » Paid Family Leave