Abstract
INTRODUCTION: This study examines whether specific religious traditions-rather than just religion itself-demonstrate significant associations with COVID-19 vaccination rates. METHODS: County-level COVID-19 vaccination data (2021-2022) were matched with religious composition data from the 2020 U.S. Religion Census for 6 major religious traditions. The analysis uses negative binomial regression to examine how religious adherence is associated with vaccination rates, controlling for other variables. RESULTS: Catholic and Mainline Protestant populations showed significant positive associations with vaccination rates (+12.4% and +25.1% respectively), whereas Evangelical Protestant populations demonstrated significant negative associations (-12.9%). Associations persisted when controlling for other variables, including political ideology, with Republican voting preference emerging as the strongest predictor across all religious traditions (coefficients ranging from -55.6% to -93.7%). Mormon, Black Protestant, and Muslim populations showed no significant associations, including in national and region-specific analyses. CONCLUSIONS: Religious traditions influence preventive health measures through limited but significant group-specific processes. Church-sect positioning partially explains these patterns, with historically culturally integrated traditions showing greater receptivity to vaccination than those maintaining some cultural tension. Given the contrasts in associations across religious traditions, public health outreach approaches should consider the context of specific religious traditions rather than merely approaching religion as a monolithic variable.