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The impact of COVID-19 vaccination in prisons in England and Wales: a metapopulation model

Authors :
McCarthy, Ciara V.
O’Mara, Oscar
van Leeuwen, Edwin
Sherratt, Katharine
Abbas, Kaja
Wong, Kerry LM
Atkins, Katherine E.
Lowe, Rachel
Meakin, Sophie R
Davies, Nicholas G.
Russell, Timothy W
O’Reilly, Kathleen
Hué, Stéphane
Finch, Emilie
Villabona-Arenas, C Julian
Edmunds, W John
Jafari, Yalda
Tully, Damien C
Bosse, Nikos I
Pearson, Carl A B
Hodgson, David
Kucharski, Adam J
Medley, Graham
Liu, Yang
Procter, Simon R
Waites, William
Abbott, Sam
Barnard, Rosanna C
Sun, Fiona Yueqian
Gibbs, Hamish P
Eggo, Rosalind M
Chapman, Lloyd A C
Flasche, Stefan
Endo, Akira
Mee, Paul
Munday, James D
Koltai, Mihaly
Gimma, Amy
Jarvis, Christopher I
Quaife, Matthew
Clifford, Samuel
Funk, Sebastian
Prem, Kiesha
Knight, Gwenan M
Pung, Rachael
Brady, Oliver
Quilty, Billy J
Jit, Mark
Sandmann, Frank
Source :
McCarthy, C V, O’Mara, O, van Leeuwen, E & Jit, M & Sandmann, F 2022, ' The impact of COVID-19 vaccination in prisons in England and Wales : a metapopulation model ', BMC Public Health, vol. 22, no. 1, 1003 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-13219-4
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Background High incidence of cases and deaths due to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have been reported in prisons worldwide. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of different COVID-19 vaccination strategies in epidemiologically semi-enclosed settings such as prisons, where staff interact regularly with those incarcerated and the wider community. Methods We used a metapopulation transmission-dynamic model of a local prison in England and Wales. Two-dose vaccination strategies included no vaccination, vaccination of all individuals who are incarcerated and/or staff, and an age-based approach. Outcomes were quantified in terms of COVID-19-related symptomatic cases, losses in quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), and deaths. Results Compared to no vaccination, vaccinating all people living and working in prison reduced cases, QALY loss and deaths over a one-year period by 41%, 32% and 36% respectively. However, if vaccine introduction was delayed until the start of an outbreak, the impact was negligible. Vaccinating individuals who are incarcerated and staff over 50 years old averted one death for every 104 vaccination courses administered. All-staff-only strategies reduced cases by up to 5%. Increasing coverage from 30 to 90% among those who are incarcerated reduced cases by around 30 percentage points. Conclusions The impact of vaccination in prison settings was highly dependent on early and rapid vaccine delivery. If administered to both those living and working in prison prior to an outbreak occurring, vaccines could substantially reduce COVID-19-related morbidity and mortality in prison settings.

Details

ISSN :
14712458
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Public Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a1f64b9be346458a4f56462b1b64ecc