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Vaccine optimization for COVID-19: Who to vaccinate first?

Laura Matrajt, Julia Eaton, Tiffany Leung, Elizabeth R. Brown

2021Science Advances422 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Vaccines, when available, will likely become our best tool to control the COVID-19 pandemic. Even in the most optimistic scenarios, vaccine shortages will likely occur. Using an age-stratified mathematical model paired with optimization algorithms, we determined optimal vaccine allocation for four different metrics (deaths, symptomatic infections, and maximum non-ICU and ICU hospitalizations) under many scenarios. We find that a vaccine with effectiveness ≥50% would be enough to substantially mitigate the ongoing pandemic, provided that a high percentage of the population is optimally vaccinated. When minimizing deaths, we find that for low vaccine effectiveness, irrespective of vaccination coverage, it is optimal to allocate vaccine to high-risk (older) age groups first. In contrast, for higher vaccine effectiveness, there is a switch to allocate vaccine to high-transmission (younger) age groups first for high vaccination coverage. While there are other societal and ethical considerations, this work can provide an evidence-based rationale for vaccine prioritization.

Topics & Concepts

VaccinationPandemicMedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PrioritizationEconomic shortageTransmission (telecommunications)Vaccine efficacyPopulationVirologyEnvironmental healthImmunologyComputer scienceDiseaseBusinessInfectious disease (medical specialty)Government (linguistics)PathologyLinguisticsProcess managementPhilosophyTelecommunicationsSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchCOVID-19 epidemiological studiesVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy
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