4.7 Article

COVID-19 Vaccine Allocation: Modeling Health Outcomes and Equity Implications of Alternative Strategies

Journal

ENGINEERING
Volume 7, Issue 7, Pages 924-935

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eng.2021.03.014

Keywords

Vaccine allocation; COVID-19; Equity; SEIR model

Funding

  1. Value of Vaccination Research Network (VoVRN) from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1158136]
  2. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1158136] Funding Source: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

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The paper evaluates COVID-19 vaccine prioritization strategies and finds that prioritizing essential workers can reduce the number of cases and years of life lost, while prioritizing older adults in most scenarios can achieve the largest reduction in deaths. Uncertainty and potential delays in dose delivery reinforce the need for prioritizing older adults.
Given the scarcity of safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines, a chief policy question is how to allocate them among different sociodemographic groups. This paper evaluates COVID-19 vaccine prioritization strategies proposed to date, focusing on their stated goals; the mechanisms through which the selected allocations affect the course and burden of the pandemic; and the main epidemiological, economic, logistical, and political issues that arise when setting the prioritization strategy. The paper uses a simple, age stratified susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered model applied to the United States to quantitatively assess the performance of alternative prioritization strategies with respect to avoided deaths, avoided infections, and life-years gained. We demonstrate that prioritizing essential workers is a viable strategy for reducing the number of cases and years of life lost, while the largest reduction in deaths is achieved by prioritizing older adults in most scenarios, even if the vaccine is effective at blocking viral transmission. Uncertainty regarding this property and potential delays in dose delivery reinforce the call for prioritizing older adults. Additionally, we investigate the strength of the equity motive that would support an allocation strategy attaching absolute priority to essential workers for a vaccine that reduces infection fatality risk. (C) 2021 THE AUTHORS. Published by Elsevier LTD on behalf of Chinese Academy of Engineering and Higher Education Press Limited Company.

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