Litcius/Paper detail

Association between live childhood vaccines and COVID-19 outcomes: a national-level analysis

Chikara Ogimi, Pingping Qu, Michael Boeckh, Rachel Bender Ignacio, Sahar Z. Zangeneh

2021Epidemiology and Infection20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We investigated whether countries with higher coverage of childhood live vaccines [BCG or measles-containing-vaccine (MCV)] have reduced risk of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-related mortality, while accounting for known systems differences between countries. In this ecological study of 140 countries using publicly available national-level data, higher vaccine coverage, representing estimated proportion of people vaccinated during the last 14 years, was associated with lower COVID-19 deaths. The associations attenuated for both vaccine variables, and MCV coverage became no longer significant once adjusted for published estimates of the Healthcare access and quality index (HAQI), a validated summary score of healthcare quality indicators. The magnitude of association between BCG coverage and COVID-19 death rate varied according to HAQI, and MCV coverage had little effect on the association between BCG and COVID-19 deaths. While there are associations between live vaccine coverage and COVID-19 outcomes, the vaccine coverage variables themselves were strongly correlated with COVID-19 testing rate, HAQI and life expectancy. This suggests that the population-level associations may be further confounded by differences in structural health systems and policies. Cluster randomised studies of booster vaccines would be ideal to evaluate the efficacy of trained immunity in preventing COVID-19 infections and mortality in vaccinated populations and on community transmission.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMeaslesEnvironmental healthDemographyPandemicHerd immunityMeasles vaccineMortality ratePopulationVaccinationLife expectancyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)DiseaseImmunologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyInternal medicineSociologyImmune responses and vaccinationsVaccine Coverage and HesitancyCOVID-19 Impact on Reproduction