Evaluating primary and booster vaccination prioritization strategies for COVID-19 by age and high-contact employment status using data from contact surveys

被引:1
|
作者
Roubenoff, Ethan [1 ]
Feehan, Dennis [1 ]
Mahmud, Ayesha S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Demog, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
COVID-19; Vaccination; Essential workers; Inequality; ALLOCATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.epidem.2023.100686
中图分类号
R51 [传染病];
学科分类号
100401 ;
摘要
The debate around vaccine prioritization for COVID-19 has revolved around balancing the benefits from: (1) the direct protection conferred by the vaccine amongst those at highest risk of severe disease outcomes, and (2) the indirect protection through vaccinating those that are at highest risk of being infected and of transmitting the virus. While adults aged 65+ are at highest risk for severe disease and death from COVID-19, essential service and other in-person workers with greater rates of contact may be at higher risk of acquiring and transmitting SARS-CoV-2. Unfortunately, there have been relatively little data available to understand heterogeneity in contact rates and risk across these demographic groups. Here, we retrospectively analyze and evaluate vaccination prioritization strategies by age and worker status. We use a mathematical model of SARS-CoV-2 transmission and uniquely detailed contact data collected as part of the Berkeley Interpersonal Contact Survey to evaluate five vaccination prioritization strategies: (1) prioritizing only adults over age 65, (2) prioritizing only high-contact workers, (3) splitting prioritization between adults 65+ and high-contact workers, (4) tiered prioritization of adults over age 65 followed by high-contact workers, and (5) tiered prioritization of high-contact workers followed by adults 65+. We find that for the primary two-dose vaccination schedule, assuming 70% uptake, a tiered roll-out that first prioritizes adults 65+ averts the most deaths (31% fewer deaths compared to a no-vaccination scenario) while a tiered roll-out that prioritizes high contact workers averts the most number of clinical infections (14% fewer clinical infections compared to a no-vaccination scenario). We also consider prioritization strategies for booster doses during a subsequent outbreak of a hypothetical new SARS-CoV-2 variant. We find that a tiered roll-out that prioritizes adults 65+ for booster doses consistently averts the most deaths, and it may also avert the most number of clinical cases depending on the epidemiology of the SARS-CoV-2 variant and the vaccine efficacy.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 6 条
  • [1] The characteristics of COVID-19 transmission from case to high-risk contact, a statistical analysis from contact tracing data
    Phucharoen, Chayanon
    Sangkaew, Nichapat
    Stosic, Kristina
    ECLINICALMEDICINE, 2020, 27
  • [2] A novel approach for evaluating contact patterns and risk mitigation strategies for COVID-19 in English primary schools with application of structured expert judgement
    Sparks, R. S. J.
    Aspinall, W. P.
    Brooks-Pollock, E.
    Cooke, R. M.
    Danon, L.
    Barclay, J.
    Scarrow, J. H.
    Cox, J.
    ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE, 2021, 8 (01):
  • [3] Impact of contact tracing on COVID-19 mortality: An impact evaluation using surveillance data from Colombia
    Vecino-Ortiz, Andres, I
    Congote, Juliana Villanueva
    Bedoya, Silvana Zapata
    Cucunuba, Zulma M.
    PLOS ONE, 2021, 16 (03):
  • [4] High Concentration of Anti-SARS-CoV-2 Antibodies 2 Years after COVID-19 Vaccination Stems Not Only from Boosters but Also from Widespread, Often Unrecognized, Contact with the Virus
    Swadzba, Jakub
    Panek, Andrzej
    Wasowicz, Pawel
    Anyszek, Tomasz
    Martin, Emilia
    VACCINES, 2024, 12 (05)
  • [5] Immune responses of different COVID-19 vaccination strategies by analyzing single-cell RNA sequencing data from multiple tissues using machine learning methods
    Li, Hao
    Ma, Qinglan
    Ren, Jingxin
    Guo, Wei
    Feng, Kaiyan
    Li, Zhandong
    Huang, Tao
    Cai, Yu-Dong
    FRONTIERS IN GENETICS, 2023, 14
  • [6] The impact of quality-adjusted life years on evaluating COVID-19 mitigation strategies: lessons from age-specific vaccination roll-out and variants of concern in Belgium (2020-2022)
    Willem, Lander
    Abrams, Steven
    Franco, Nicolas
    Coletti, Pietro
    Libin, Pieter J. K.
    Wambua, James
    Couvreur, Simon
    Andre, Emmanuel
    Wenseleers, Tom
    Mao, Zhuxin
    Torneri, Andrea
    Faes, Christel
    Beutels, Philippe
    Hens, Niel
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2024, 24 (01)