The number of doses allocated to each state is determined by how many adults reside there—not by how many high-priority individuals need vaccination. This will mean that while certain states lack the supplies to vaccinate their highest risk groups, stalling the entire process, others will swiftly move on to vaccinating lower priority groups. Out of all 50 states, there are a handful that fall into a particularly dangerous category, according to the CDC. These are states that have vaccinated under 1,000 people per 100,000 residents, making them home to the slowest vaccine rollouts in the nation. While “winning” states like North Dakota and South Dakota have already inoculated residents at a rate just shy of 3,000 first doses per 100,000 presidents, these states are falling fair behind. Read on to find out which states have had the slowest vaccine rollout in the country as of Jan. 2, according to the CDC, and for more on the COVID vaccine, check out These Are the Only People Who Shouldn’t Get 2 Doses of the COVID Vaccine. Read the original article on Best Life. 991 doses administered per 100,000 residents And for more regular COVID updates, sign up for our daily newsletter. 955 doses administered per 100,000 residents 906 doses administered per 100,000 residents And for more on why one prominent figure hasn’t been vaccinated, check out The Real Reason President Trump Hasn’t Gotten the COVID Vaccine Yet. 905 doses administered per 100,000 residents 812 doses administered per 100,000 residentsae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb 804 doses administered per 100,000 residents 711 doses administered per 100,000 residents And for more vaccine rollout news, check out These 2 States Are Going Against the CDC’s Vaccine Recommendations. 708 doses administered per 100,000 residents 674 doses administered per 100,000 residents And for more on how your state is doing overall, check out This Is How Bad the COVID Outbreak Is in Your State.