4.6 Article

The Canadian National Vaccine Safety Network: surveillance of adverse events following immunisation among individuals immunised with the COVID-19 vaccine, a cohort study in Canada

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-051254

Keywords

epidemiology; public health; statistics & research methods

Funding

  1. COVID-19 Vaccine Readiness from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Public Health Agency of Canada CANVAS grant [CVV-450980]
  3. Public Health Agency of Canada, through the Vaccine Surveillance Reference group
  4. Public Health Agency of Canada, through COVID-19 Immunity Task Force

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The Canadian National Vaccine Safety Network provides enhanced safety monitoring for COVID-19 vaccines, particularly for vulnerable populations. Online participant reporting and telephone follow-up are used to collect and analyze health events after vaccination. The research has obtained ethical approvals and the results are shared with public health authorities and the community.
Introduction COVID-19 vaccines require enhanced safety monitoring after emergency approval. The Canadian National Vaccine Safety Network monitors the safety of COVID-19 vaccines and provides enhanced monitoring for healthy, auto-immune, immunocompromised, pregnant and breastfeeding populations and allows for the detection of safety signals. Methods and analysis Online participant reporting of health events in vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals 12 years of age and older is captured in three surveys: 1 week after dose 1, 1 week after dose 2 and 7 months after dose 1. Medically attended events are followed up by telephone. The number, percentage, rate per 10 000 and incident rate ratios with 95% CIs are calculated by health event, vaccine type, sex and in 10-year age groups. Ethics and dissemination Each study site has Research Ethics Board approvals for the project (UBC Children's & Women's, CIUSSS de l'Estrie-CHUS, Health PEI, Conjoint Health Research Ethics Board, University of Calgary and Alberta Health Services, IWK Health, Unity Health Toronto and CHU de Quebec-Universite Laval Research Ethics Boards). Individuals are invited to participate in this active surveillance and electronic consent is given before proceeding to each survey. Weekly reports are shared with public health and posted on the study website. At least one peer-reviewed manuscript is produced.

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