COVID-19 Vaccination and Healthcare Demand

被引:0
|
作者
Matthew I. Betti
Amira Hassan Abouleish
Victoria Spofford
Cory Peddigrew
Alan Diener
Jane M. Heffernan
机构
[1] Mount Allison University,Mathematics and Computer Science
[2] Health Canada,Modelling Infection and Immunity Lab, Centre for Disease Modelling, Mathematics and Statistics
[3] York University,undefined
来源
关键词
COVID-19; Healthcare demand; Public health mitigation; Vaccination;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
One of the driving concerns during any epidemic is the strain on the healthcare system. As we have seen many times over the globe with the COVID-19 pandemic, hospitals and ICUs can quickly become overwhelmed by cases. While strict periods of public health mitigation have certainly helped decrease incidence and thus healthcare demand, vaccination is the only clear long-term solution. In this paper, we develop a two-module model to forecast the effects of relaxation of non-pharmaceutical intervention and vaccine uptake on daily incidence, and the cascade effects on healthcare demand. The first module is a simple epidemiological model which incorporates non-pharmaceutical intervention, the relaxation of such measures and vaccination campaigns to predict caseloads into the Fall of 2021. This module is then fed into a healthcare module which can forecast the number of doctor visits, the number of occupied hospital beds, number of occupied ICU beds and any excess demand of these. From this module, we can also estimate the length of stay of individuals in ICU. For model verification and forecasting, we use the four most populous Canadian provinces as a case study.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Acceptability of COVID-19 vaccination among healthcare workers in Sudan
    Khairy, Amna
    Mahgoub, Esra
    Nimir, Mohammad
    Ahmed, Mohammed
    Jubara, Mawahib
    Altayab, Dalya
    Ahmed, Ayman
    EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN HEALTH JOURNAL, 2023, 29 (05) : 362 - 370
  • [32] Mandatory COVID-19 vaccination for healthcare workers: A discussion paper
    Maneze, Della
    Salamonson, Yenna
    Grollman, Maxwell
    Montayre, Jed
    Ramjan, Lucie
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES, 2023, 138
  • [33] COVID-19 infections and effectiveness of the vaccination among healthcare workers
    Bernadette, Rojkovich
    Dora, Nemeth
    Elek, Dinya
    Erzsebet, Nagy
    Eszter, Toeroek
    Imre, Lazar
    Andras, Perduk
    Pal, Geher
    Gyorgy, Nagy
    ORVOSI HETILAP, 2023, 164 (05) : 163 - 171
  • [34] Motivators and barriers to COVID-19 vaccination of healthcare workers in Latvia
    Lielsvagere-Endele, Sintija
    Kolesnikova, Jelena
    Puzanova, Elina
    Timofejeva, Svetlana
    Millere, Inga
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 13
  • [35] COVID-19 vaccination among healthcare professionals in Germany and Norway
    Rosta, Judith
    TIDSSKRIFT FOR DEN NORSKE LAEGEFORENING, 2022, 142 (06) : 536 - 536
  • [36] Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection of healthcare personnel after complete COVID-19 vaccination
    Mungmunpuntipantip, Rujittika
    Wiwanitkit, Viroj
    INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2022, 43 (11): : 1757 - 1757
  • [37] CDC COVID-19 vaccination program: Healthcare provider compliance with COVID-19 vaccine requirements and recommendations
    Surtees, Tamara C.
    Granade, Charleigh J.
    Wells, Christopher
    Banks, Michelle
    Lucas, Paul
    Graitcer, Samuel B.
    VACCINE, 2024, 42
  • [38] The COVID-19 vaccination
    Casas, Irma
    Mena, Guillermo
    MEDICINA CLINICA, 2021, 156 (10): : 500 - 502
  • [39] Evaluation of Adverse Effects due to Inactive COVID-19 Vaccination in Healthcare Workers with or without a History of COVID-19
    Kalin-Unuvar, Gamze
    Ture-Yuce, Zeynep
    Kahveci, Nadir
    Yildiz, Orhan
    Aygen, Bilgehan
    KLIMIK JOURNAL, 2023, 36 (01) : 10 - 14
  • [40] ASSOCIATION OF PRIOR COVID-19 INFECTION AND SYSTEMIC SIDE EFFECTS AFTER COVID-19 VACCINATION IN HEALTHCARE POPULATION
    Phomakay, V.
    Lieberman, J.
    ANNALS OF ALLERGY ASTHMA & IMMUNOLOGY, 2021, 127 (05) : S48 - S48