1. Evaluation of mortality risk after COVID-19 vaccination, Utah 2021.
- Author
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Payne, Jessica R., Bose, Srimoyee, Kubiak, Rachel W., and Nolen, Leisha D.
- Subjects
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COVID-19 vaccines , *VACCINE safety , *DEATH rate , *VITAL statistics , *RISK assessment - Abstract
• Local vaccine safety data was evaluated through linkage of existing data sources. • No additional mortality risk was identified among recipients of COVID-19 vaccines. • This novel methodology could be readily used by other sub-national health agencies. In order to evaluate trends in death after COVID-19 vaccination we analyzed the timing of death relative to vaccination date and the causes of death in vaccinated Utahns in 2021. We matched people in the Utah immunization registry with documented COVID-19 vaccinations between December 18, 2020 and December 31, 2021 to Utah's 2021 vital statistics death records. Vaccinated people were categorized as having one, two, or ≥ three COVID-19 vaccine doses in a time-updated metric. We examined crude mortality rates by dosing groups in two-week intervals for all deaths, and by COVID-19 versus non-COVID-19 causes, within the 44 weeks following receipt of the most recent vaccine. We identified 2,072,908 individuals who received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine of whom 10,997 died in 2021. Only 17.5 % of the total vaccinated population was age 65+, while 80.9 % of those who died were over 65. In the four weeks following the first or second vaccination, all-cause mortality was low and then stabilized for the remainder of the evaluation period at a bi-weekly average of 33.0 and 39.0 deaths/100,000 people for one and two doses, respectively. Typical seasonal variation in death was observed among those with two doses. Small sample size precluded analysis of those with ≥ three doses, but trends were similar. Mortality rates in the 44 weeks following the COVID-19 vaccination did not show trends suggesting an increase in mortality related to COVID-19 vaccination, reinforcing the safety of COVID-19 vaccines. This represents an accessible approach for local evaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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