| Literature DB >> 33144317 |
Shainoor J Ismail1, Linlu Zhao1, Matthew C Tunis1, Shelley L Deeks1, Caroline Quach1.
Abstract
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33144317 PMCID: PMC7721393 DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.202353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CMAJ ISSN: 0820-3946 Impact factor: 8.262
Figure 1:Summary of preliminary National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) recommendations on key populations for early coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) immunization. Note: *Order does not indicate priority. †Based on the systematic assessment of ethics, equity, feasibility and acceptability using an evidence-informed framework.27
Risk factors identified through a rapid review that have large or important (++), or very large or very important (+++) associations with severe COVID-19 outcomes, and the corresponding level of confidence in the association*
| Risk factor | Outcome of interest | Magnitude of risk |
|---|---|---|
| Age, yr | ||
| > 80 v. ≤ 45 | Hospital admission | +++ (low) |
| Death | +++ (low) | |
| > 70 v. ≤ 45 | Hospital admission | +++ (moderate) |
| Death | +++ (moderate) | |
| > 60 v. ≤ 45 | Hospital admission | ++/+++ (moderate/low) |
| Death | ++/+++ (moderate/low) | |
| 50–64 v. ≤ 45 | Hospital admission | ++ (moderate) |
| Death | ++ (moderate) | |
| 45–54 v. ≤ 45 | Hospital admission | ++ (moderate) |
| Death | ++ (low) | |
| Pre-existing conditions | ||
| Obesity (BMI ≥ 40) | Hospital admission | ++ (low) |
| Heart failure | Hospital admission | ++ (low) |
| Diabetes mellitus | Hospital admission | ++ (low) |
| Liver disease | Death | ++ (low) |
| Chronic kidney disease | Hospital admission | ++ (low) |
| Alzheimer disease or dementia | Hospital admission | ++ (low) |
| Sex | ||
| Male v. female | Hospital admission | ++ (moderate) |
| Race or ethnicity | ||
| Black v. non-Hispanic White | Hospital admission | ++ (low) |
| Asian (Bangladeshi) v. British White | Death | ++ (low) |
| Place of residence | ||
| Homeless v. has a home | Hospital admission | ++ (low) |
| Socioeconomic status | ||
| Income ≤ 25th v. > 50th or 75th percentile | Hospital admission | ++ (low) |
Note: BMI = body mass index, COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019, NACI = National Advisory Committee on Immunization.
This table summarizes the results of a rapid review of risk factors for severe outcomes in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development member countries, conducted by the Alberta Research Centre for Health Evidence.19 A total of 34 published studies were included in this review. Generalization of findings from other countries to Canada should be made with caution, as high-risk groups may differ by population. Furthermore, because of differences in methodology, the list of important risk factors identified in this rapid review may differ from other sources. Updated evidence syntheses will inform future NACI decisions.
The order of these risk factors is based on evidence appraisal and does not indicate order of priority.
Magnitude of associations are shown as large or important (++; odds ratio or risk ratio ≥ 2.00), or very large or very important association (+++; odds ratio or risk ratio ≥ 5.00).
A formal assessment of the quality or confidence of the evidence was not performed but the process of assessing the quality or confidence of the evidence was based on the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations approach (www.gradeworkinggroup.org/). Confidence in the magnitude of the associations was determined by considering primarily study limitations (risk of bias), consistency in findings across studies and precision (sample size). Low confidence indicates that there may be an association and moderate confidence means that the evidence indicates that there probably is an association.
Summary of evidence for recommendations on key populations for early COVID-19 immunization
| Recommended key populations for early COVID-19 immunization | Summary of best available evidence and rationale for the consensus recommendation |
|---|---|
| Those at high risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19:
Advanced age Other high-risk conditions ( |
There are large or important independent associations of severe COVID-19 outcomes with increasing age and for certain high-risk health conditions. Current surveillance data in Canada have shown that hospital admission, ICU admission and death rates from COVID-19 increase with age, and that people with certain underlying health conditions are at highest risk of developing more severe illness from COVID-19. Expert stakeholder groups and patient and community advocates, Most Canadians identified those with underlying medical conditions (57%) and older people (53%) as groups who should get a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine first, if supplies are limited. Older Canadians are significantly more willing than younger Canadians to get an effective recommended SARS-CoV-2 vaccine, |
| Those most likely to transmit COVID-19 to those at high risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19 and workers essential to maintaining the COVID-19 response
Health care workers, personal care workers and caregivers providing care in long-term care facilities or other congregate care facilities for seniors Other workers most essential in managing the COVID-19 response or providing front-line care for patients with COVID-19 Household contacts of those at high risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19 |
In Canada, long-term care facilities have experienced a large number of outbreaks associated with a high number of fatalities. Immunizing health care, personal care and other workers providing front-line care directly protects them from acquiring SARS-CoV-2 infection and could indirectly protect their patients and health care capacity. Although front-line health care workers and other workers functioning in a health care capacity (e.g., providing medical first response) have differential exposure to SARS-CoV-2 with potential transmission to high-risk individuals, they may have more access to and training in the use of PPE and other infection prevention and control measures, and so exposure risk could be substantially reduced compared with other groups. Protection against infection with SARS-CoV-2 has been demonstrated in health care workers with the use of PPE. Immunizing health care workers and other workers functioning in a health care capacity minimizes the disproportionate burden of those taking on additional risks to protect the public. Absenteeism because of illness or perceived risk of illness from COVID-19 among health care workers and other workers most essential in managing the COVID-19 response (e.g., outbreak management, laboratory testing, immunization) may compromise health care capacity and the management of the COVID-19 response. Expert stakeholder groups and patient and community advocates, 22% of Canadians identify “health care workers” as a key population for priority immunization in the case of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine shortage. Immunizing those able to transmit SARS-CoV-2 to those at high risk of severe illness and death could indirectly protect those at high risk (if the vaccine is effective in interrupting transmission), which could be particularly important if vaccine characteristics are not favourable in high-risk populations. |
| Those contributing to the maintenance of other essential services for the functioning of society ( |
Certain individuals who cannot work virtually may have differential exposure to SARS-CoV-2. Designations of essential services in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic vary across jurisdictions in Canada. Guidance on essential services and functions during the COVID-19 pandemic, including lists published by provinces and territories, is available. Provinces and territories have expressed a desire for a harmonized approach to vaccine prioritization for essential services. The appropriate federal, provincial and territorial health tables will be consulted in discussions on prioritization for the purposes of immunization. Immunizing this population minimizes the disproportionate burden of those taking on additional risks to maintain services essential for the functioning of society. Absenteeism because of illness or perceived risk of illness from COVID-19 among some workers who cannot work virtually may compromise essential services. Expert stakeholder groups and patient and community advocates, 18% of Canadians identify “front-line or essential workers” as a key population for priority immunization in the case of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine shortage. |
| Those whose living or working conditions put them at elevated risk of infection and where infection could have disproportionate consequences, including Indigenous communities ( |
In Canada, a high number of COVID-19 outbreaks or clusters in institutions (e.g., correctional facilities), work settings (e.g., agricultural or meat production or packing facilities) and congregate-living settings (e.g., shelters, migrant workers) have occurred. The risk of transmission is high in these settings, where physical distancing and other infection prevention and control measures are challenging, and individuals may not be able to exercise sufficient personal actions to adequately protect themselves from infection. This increased risk may expand to other settings as they reopen. Remote or isolated populations or those in some congregate-living populations may not have ready access to sufficient health care infrastructure. Therefore, their risk for death and societal disruption is proportionally greater, as the response to any illness within the community might be suboptimal. Indigenous communities have been disproportionately affected by past pandemics (e.g., the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic) and require special consideration of issues related to equity, feasibility and acceptability. |
Note: COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019, PPE = personal protective equipment, SARS-CoV-2 = severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2.
Order does not indicate priority.
Summary of evidence for recommendations on principles to guide public health program–level decision-making on a COVID-19 immunization program
| Recommended guiding principle for decision-making | Summary of best available evidence and rationale for the consensus recommendation |
|---|---|
| Efforts should be made to increase access to immunization services to reduce health inequities without further stigmatization or discrimination, and to engage systematically marginalized and racialized populations in immunization program planning (see NACI’s Equity Matrix, Appendix D in the full guideline). |
Health inequities exist in part because of differential access to health care, as well as differential exposure, susceptibility and severity of infectious diseases (see Equity Matrix, Appendix D in the full guideline). Interventions to reduce these inequities rather than potentiate them with further stigmatization or discrimination should be implemented as part of any immunization program. As with any immunization program, efforts should be made to ensure consideration of the needs of diverse population groups, based on health status, ethnicity or culture, ability, and other socioeconomic and demographic factors that may place individuals in vulnerable circumstances (e.g., occupational, social, economic or biological vulnerabilities). These efforts should include integrating the values and preferences of these populations in vaccine program planning and building capacity to ensure access and convenience of immunization services. There is evidence of important or large independent associations of severe COVID-19 with race or ethnicity (low certainty of evidence of hospital admission or death), low socioeconomic status (low certainty of evidence for hospital admission), homelessness (low certainty of evidence for hospital admission), and male sex (moderate certainty of evidence for hospital admission). Outbreaks involving large numbers of reported cases have occurred in rural and remote communities in Canada. Outbreaks involving large numbers of reported cases have occurred in agricultural work settings, including those with congregate living for migrant workers. Visible minorities and Indigenous Canadians appear to be less willing than nonvisible minorities to get an effective recommended SARS-CoV-2 vaccine. Although significant differences in willingness to get vaccinated with a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine have not been observed by sex or socioeconomic status, Examples of interventions to engage communities and address barriers to accessing vaccine, as summarized in the Equity Matrix (Appendix D in the full guideline), could help reduce inequities. The principle of equity urges consideration of health and economic disparities to ensure a fair distribution of resources. |
| Jurisdictions should begin planning for the implementation of a COVID-19 immunization program, including rapid monitoring of safety, effectiveness and coverage of vaccine(s) in different key populations, as well as effective and efficient immunization of populations in remote and isolated communities (see Feasibility Matrix, Appendix E in the full guideline). |
Stakeholder reviews of feasibility identified multiple challenges requiring advanced planning and complex combinations of program administration through a variety of vaccine delivery models across Canada. Planning is required to address issues specific to a potential COVID-19 immunization program (e.g., storage and dissemination of new vaccine technologies in different vaccine delivery venues; human resources for administration of vaccine, communication, training, data entry, screening for COVID-19, security of supplies, operational planning, etc.), and integration with or enhancement of existing programs (e.g., registries, surveillance, adverse event after immunization reporting). Rapid monitoring of safety, effectiveness and coverage of the vaccine(s) in potentially different key populations will be critical. The feasibility of sequential immunization of different key populations in remote and isolated communities is challenging. In these settings, deploying vaccine to entire communities may be more effective and efficient than sequential immunization of different key populations. |
| Efforts should be made to improve knowledge about the benefits of vaccines in general and of COVID-19 vaccine(s) specifically, once available, to address misinformation about immunization, and to communicate transparently about COVID-19 vaccine allocation decisions (see Acceptability Matrix, Appendix F in the full guideline). |
Willingness to get a safe, effective SARS-CoV-2 vaccine has decreased over time in Canada (from 71% in April to 61% in August 2020). Deemed 1 of the top 10 major global health threats by WHO in 2019, vaccine hesitancy could limit the success of a COVID-19 immunization program. Key reasons for vaccine hesitancy include complacency, inconvenience in accessing vaccines and lack of confidence. Efforts should be made to reduce complacency, improve convenient access to vaccines, and improve confidence in and awareness of immunization in the public, key populations for early COVID-19 immunization and health care providers. Transparent, clear communication about vaccine trials, pharmacovigilance In general, receiving a recommendation from, or being in contact with a health care provider, is linked to increased vaccine acceptability, |
Note: COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019, NACI = National Advisory Committee on Immunization, SARS-CoV-2 = severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, WHO = World Health Organization.
Order does not indicate priority.
Definitions adopted for the application of the Ethics, Equity, Feasibility, Acceptability Framework27
| Factor | Definition |
|---|---|
| Ethics | A systematic process to clarify, prioritize and justify possible courses of action based on ethical principles, and involves the application of relevant principles and values to public health decision-making. |
| Equity | The absence of avoidable, unfair or remediable differences among groups of people, whether those groups are defined socially, economically, demographically or geographically or by other means of stratification. “Health equity” or “equity in health” implies that ideally, everyone should have a fair opportunity to attain their full health potential and that no one should be disadvantaged from achieving this potential. |
| Feasibility | The potential for a program to be successfully implemented in the local setting with available resources. |
| Acceptability | A marker of desirability or demand for a given product or program, including intention and behaviours toward vaccination. |
Summary of interim guidance on COVID-19 immunization from other national immunization technical advisory groups
| National immunization technical advisory group | Summary of recommendations on priority groups |
|---|---|
| Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunization, United Kingdom | The updated interim advice on priority groups for COVID-19 vaccination uses a combination of clinical risk stratification and an age-based approach with the provisional ranking of prioritization for persons at risk, as follows:
Older adult residents in a care home and care home workers All those aged 80 years and older, and health and social care workers All those aged 75 years and older All those aged 70 years and older All those aged 65 years and older High-risk adults younger than 65 years Moderate-risk adults younger than 65 years All those aged 60 years and older All those aged 55 years and older All those aged 50 years and older Rest of the population (priority to be determined) |
| Haute Autorité de Santé, France | The preliminary advice identified key populations for vaccine prioritization based on health risk and occupational risk, whether they were critical workers, and socioeconomic and demographic characteristics, as follows: Population at risk of occupational exposure (health personnel or those working with vulnerable groups; as well as front-line workers, people working in confined areas and workers with confined-accommodation arrangements) People at higher risk because of their age or health conditions, both in metropolitan France and overseas departments and regions of France People living in precarious situations Populations of the overseas departments and regions of France in the event of a shortage of resuscitation beds (and who do not belong to the groups that have already been prioritized) People living in closed establishments at increased risk of transmission (e.g., prisons, establishments for people with disabilities, psychiatric hospitals) Personnel with strategic jobs (e.g., police officers, firefighters, active military personnel) |
Note: COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019, JCVI = Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunization.
An older version of the JCVI interim advice on priority groups for COVID-19 vaccination (June 18, 2020) was reviewed by the National Advisory Committee on Immunization. In the now withdrawn report, JCVI advised priority recommendation of front-line health and social care workers and those at increased risk of serious disease and death from COVID-19 infection, stratified according to age and risk factors.