SYLACAUGA, Ala. – Alabama now has the least amount of fully vaccinated residents in the nation.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, only 33.2% of Alabamians are fully vaccinated just barely behind Mississippi.
The percentage of new cases statewide has increased 80% from just two weeks ago.
According to the Alabama Department of Public Health’s COVID-19 risk indicator, 26 Alabama counties are ranking in the ‘very high risk’ for spreading the virus.
Autauga, Baldwin, Blount, Chilton, Clarke, Coffee, Colbert, Crenshaw, Dale, Elmore, Henry, Houston, Jefferson, Lauderdale, Lee, Limestone, Macon, Marshall, Mobile, Montgomery, Morgan, Shelby, St. Clair, Talladega, Tuscaloosa and Walker counties all ranked in the ‘very high risk’ category.
Risk categories are determined primarily by the number of new COVID cases per day. If the number of cases is staying the same or increasing, the county is moved to the “very high risk” category. Counties with decreasing counts for 1-6 days are in the high-risk category. A decline of 7-13 days is considered “moderate” and if a county has a downward trajectory of 14 or more days or has a rate of 10 cases or less over the previous two weeks, it is moved to green.
The ADPH is stressing the importance of getting vaccinated to prevent spreading the virus.
The state of Alabama has reported 555,215 total confirmed cases of the virus and 11,402 deaths since March 2020.
For more information on COVID-19 in Alabama or to find a vaccination clinic near you, click here.