Clinical outcomes and cost-effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccination in South Africa

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作者
Krishna P. Reddy
Kieran P. Fitzmaurice
Justine A. Scott
Guy Harling
Richard J. Lessells
Christopher Panella
Fatma M. Shebl
Kenneth A. Freedberg
Mark J. Siedner
机构
[1] Massachusetts General Hospital,Medical Practice Evaluation Center
[2] Massachusetts General Hospital,Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine
[3] Harvard Medical School,MRC/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit (Agincourt)
[4] Africa Health Research Institute,School of Nursing and Public Health, College of Health Sciences
[5] University of the Witwatersrand,Institute for Global Health
[6] University of KwaZulu-Natal,Department of Epidemiology and Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies
[7] University College London,KwaZulu
[8] Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health,Natal Research Innovation and Sequencing (KRISP), College of Health Sciences
[9] University of KwaZulu-Natal,Division of General Internal Medicine
[10] Massachusetts General Hospital,Division of Infectious Diseases
[11] Massachusetts General Hospital,Department of Health Policy and Management
[12] Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health,undefined
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Low- and middle-income countries are implementing COVID-19 vaccination strategies in light of varying vaccine efficacies and costs, supply shortages, and resource constraints. Here, we use a microsimulation model to evaluate clinical outcomes and cost-effectiveness of a COVID-19 vaccination program in South Africa. We varied vaccination coverage, pace, acceptance, effectiveness, and cost as well as epidemic dynamics. Providing vaccines to at least 40% of the population and prioritizing vaccine rollout prevented >9 million infections and >73,000 deaths and reduced costs due to fewer hospitalizations. Model results were most sensitive to assumptions about epidemic growth and prevalence of prior immunity to SARS-CoV-2, though the vaccination program still provided high value and decreased both deaths and health care costs across a wide range of assumptions. Vaccination program implementation factors, including prompt procurement, distribution, and rollout, are likely more influential than characteristics of the vaccine itself in maximizing public health benefits and economic efficiency.
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