The importance of increasing primary vaccinations against COVID-19 in Europe

IF 8.8 3区 医学 Q1 Medicine
Pierre-Yves Boëlle, Eugenio Valdano
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In the European Union, mass vaccination against COVID-19 staved off the strict restrictions that had characterized early epidemic response. Now, vaccination campaigns are focusing on booster doses, and primary vaccinations have all but halted. Still, 52 million European adults are unvaccinated.

We investigated if reaching the still unvaccinated population in future vaccination campaigns would substantially decrease the current burden of COVID-19, which is substantial. We focused on vaccination homophily, whereby those who are unvaccinated are mostly in contact with other unvaccinated, making COVID-19 circulation easier. We quantified vaccination homophily and estimated its impact on COVID-19 circulation.

We used an online survey of 1,055,286 people from 22 European countries during early 2022. We computed vaccination homophily as the association between reported vaccination status and perceived vaccination uptake among one's own social contacts, using a case-referent design and a hierarchical logistic model. We used this information in an analysis of the COVID-19 reproduction ratio to determine the impact of vaccine homophily in transmission.

Vaccination homophily was present and strong everywhere: the average odds ratio of being vaccinated for a 10-percentage-point increase in coverage among contacts was 1.66 (95% CI=(1.60, 1.72)). Homophily was positively associated with the strictness of COVID-19-related restrictions in 2020 (Pearson = 0.49, P = .03). In the countries studied, 12%-to-18% of the reproduction ratio would be attributable to vaccine homophily.

Reducing vaccination homophily may curb the reproduction ratio substantially even to the point of preventing recurrent epidemic waves. In addition to boosting those already vaccinated, increasing primary vaccination should remain a high priority in future vaccination campaigns, to reduce vaccination homophily: this combined strategy may decrease COVID-19 burden.

在欧洲增加COVID-19初级疫苗接种的重要性
在欧盟,针对COVID-19的大规模疫苗接种避免了作为早期流行病应对特征的严格限制。现在,疫苗接种运动的重点是加强剂量,初级疫苗接种几乎已经停止。尽管如此,仍有5200万欧洲成年人未接种疫苗。我们调查了在未来的疫苗接种运动中覆盖尚未接种疫苗的人群是否会大大减少当前COVID-19的负担,这是实质性的。我们重点关注疫苗接种的同质性,即未接种疫苗的人大多与其他未接种疫苗的人接触,使COVID-19更容易传播。我们量化了疫苗同源性,并估计了其对COVID-19循环的影响。我们在2022年初对来自22个欧洲国家的1055286人进行了在线调查。我们使用案例参照设计和分层逻辑模型计算了疫苗接种同质性,即报告的疫苗接种状态与自己的社会接触中感知的疫苗接种之间的关联。我们将这些信息用于分析COVID-19的繁殖比率,以确定疫苗同源性在传播中的影响。疫苗接种同质性普遍存在,且无处不在:接触者中接种疫苗的平均优势比为1.66 (95% CI=(1.60, 1.72))。同质性与2020年covid -19相关限制的严格程度呈正相关(Pearson = 0.49, P = 0.03)。在所研究的国家中,12%至18%的生殖比率可归因于疫苗同源性。减少疫苗接种的同质性可以大大抑制繁殖比率,甚至达到防止再次流行的程度。除了促进已经接种疫苗的人之外,在未来的疫苗接种运动中,增加初级疫苗接种仍应是一个高度优先事项,以减少疫苗接种的同质性:这一综合战略可能会减轻COVID-19的负担。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Infectious Disease Modelling
Infectious Disease Modelling Mathematics-Applied Mathematics
CiteScore
17.00
自引率
3.40%
发文量
73
审稿时长
17 weeks
期刊介绍: Infectious Disease Modelling is an open access journal that undergoes peer-review. Its main objective is to facilitate research that combines mathematical modelling, retrieval and analysis of infection disease data, and public health decision support. The journal actively encourages original research that improves this interface, as well as review articles that highlight innovative methodologies relevant to data collection, informatics, and policy making in the field of public health.
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