| Literature DB >> 35206836 |
Sarah Cuschieri1, Amalia Hatziyianni2, Marios Kantaris3, Antonis Kontemeniotis4, Mamas Theodorou5, Elena Pallari6.
Abstract
A mass vaccination strategy is estimated to be the long-term solution to control COVID-19. Different European countries have committed to vaccination strategies with variable population inoculation rates. We sought to investigate the extent to which the COVID-19 vaccination strategies, inoculation rate, and COVID-19 outcome differ between Cyprus and Malta. Data were obtained from the Ministry of Health websites and COVID-19 dashboards, while vaccination data were obtained from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control until mid-June, 2021. Comparative assessments were performed between the two countries using Microsoft® Excel for Mac, Version 16.54. Both islands took part in the European Union's advanced purchase agreement and received their first batch of vaccines on 27 December 2020. The positivity rate and mortality between December and June differs between the two countries (average positivity rate Cyprus 1.34, Malta 3.37 p ≤ 0.01; average mortality Cyprus 7.29, Malta 9.68 p ≤ 0.01). Both the positivity rate and mortality for Cyprus declined due to strict public health measures and vaccination roll-out in early January (positivity rate by 95% and mortality by 58%). In contrast, for Malta, there was a sharp increase (64% p ≤ 0.01) with almost no public health restrictions in place and soaring cases during the Christmas and Carnival period until March, when lockdown measures were re-introduced. A distinctive difference between Cyprus and Malta in positivity rate (14 per 100,000 population; p ≤ 0.01) can also be observed between January and mid-April 2021. However, from April onwards it is evident that the positivity rate and mortality decline (positivity rate Cyprus by 82%, Malta by 95%; mortality Cyprus by 90%, Malta by 95%, p ≤ 0.01, respectively) in both countries as the vaccination roll-outs progressed, covering about 58.93% of the Maltese population, while Cyprus had fully inoculated about 38.03% of its population. The vaccine strategies and vaccination rates were similar for both countries; yet Malta had the fastest vaccine roll-out. Reluctancy to get vaccinated, significant differences in the vaccination appointment scheduling system, and the freedom of vaccination choice for the citizens in Cyprus may have contributed to a delayed vaccination roll-out. These potential contributing factors should be acknowledged and considered for future vaccination programs and potential COVID-19 boosters.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Cyprus; Malta; mass vaccination; morbidity; mortality; vaccine hesitancy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35206836 PMCID: PMC8872547 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10020222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Figure 1Comparative assessment of the cumulative vaccination population coverage in Cyprus and Malta across weeks according to the different doses. Black arrows represent the proportion difference between both islands for the same week.
Comparative analyses of the first dose and fully vaccinated distribution in Cyprus and Malta by age groups and vaccine brand up until 13 June 2021.
| Cyprus | Malta | Cyprus | Malta | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st Dose | 1st Dose | Fully Vaccinated | Fully Vaccinated | ||||||
| N | %* | N | %* | N | %* | N | %* | ||
| 18–24 years | Pfizer | 12,878 | 15.18% | 14,749 | 35.00% | 376 | 0.44% | 5513 | 13.08% |
| Moderna | 3477 | 4.10% | 2177 | 5.17% | 44 | 0.05% | 158 | 0.37% | |
| AZ | 1153 | 1.36% | 3747 | 8.89% | 317 | 0.37% | 3609 | 8.57% | |
| J&J | 26 | 0.03% | 53 | 0.13% | |||||
| Total | 17,508 | 20.63% | 20,673 | 49.06% | 763 | 0.90% | 9333 | 22.15% | |
| 25–49 years | Pfizer | 89,889 | 27.21% | 80,926 | 39.45% | 71,277 | 21.58% | 68,505 | 33.39% |
| Moderna | 16,334 | 4.95% | 7756 | 3.78% | 3227 | 0.98% | 2125 | 1.04% | |
| AZ | 34,304 | 10.39% | 30,826 | 15.03% | 2799 | 0.85% | 21,455 | 10.46% | |
| J&J | 5211 | 1.58% | 170 | 0.08% | |||||
| Total | 140,527 | 42.55% | 119,508 | 58.25% | 82,514 | 24.98% | 92,255 | 44.97% | |
| 50–59 years | Pfizer | 43,972 | 40.85% | 20,942 | 35.39% | 38,122 | 35.42% | 20,812 | 35.17% |
| Moderna | 5215 | 4.85% | 1433 | 2.42% | 954 | 0.89% | 557 | 0.94% | |
| AZ | 19,743 | 18.34% | 20,960 | 35.42% | 1434 | 1.33% | 5644 | 9.54% | |
| J&J | 37 | 0.03% | 26 | 0.04% | |||||
| Total | 68,930 | 64.04% | 43,335 | 73.24% | 40,547 | 37.67% | 27,039 | 45.70% | |
| 60–69 years | Pfizer | 35,071 | 37.03% | 18,503 | 31.07% | 31,378 | 33.13% | 19,306 | 32.42% |
| Moderna | 6378 | 6.73% | 2876 | 4.83% | 4268 | 4.51% | 4560 | 7.66% | |
| AZ | 30,048 | 31.72% | 22,861 | 38.39% | 10,503 | 11.09% | 18,311 | 30.75% | |
| J&J | 285 | 0.30% | 5 | 0.01% | |||||
| Total | 71,497 | 75.49% | 44,240 | 74.29% | 46,434 | 49.03% | 42,182 | 70.83% | |
| 70–79 years | Pfizer | 20,878 | 31.43% | 36,209 | 80.61% | 18,729 | 28.19% | 36,847 | 82.03% |
| Moderna | 3427 | 5.16% | 4828 | 10.75% | 3364 | 5.06% | 5517 | 12.28% | |
| AZ | 33,305 | 50.14% | 1673 | 3.72% | 29,020 | 43.69% | 485 | 1.08% | |
| J&J | 47 | 0.07% | 3 | 0.01% | |||||
| Total | 57,610 | 86.72% | 42,710 | 95.08% | 51,160 | 77.01% | 42,852 | 95.40% | |
| 80+ years | Pfizer | 24,479 | 73.01% | 21,543 | 99.33% | 23,629 | 70.47% | 19,797 | 91.28% |
| Moderna | 824 | 2.46% | 42 | 0.19% | 808 | 2.41% | 53 | 0.24% | |
| AZ | 4307 | 12.85% | 34 | 0.16% | 2832 | 8.45% | 56 | 0.26% | |
| J&J | 2 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.00% | |||||
| Total | 29,610 | 88.31% | 21,619 | 99.68% | 27,271 | 81.33% | 19,907 | 91.78% | |
%*: percentage of eligible population by age group.
Figure 2Comparative assessment of the cumulative vaccination population coverage in Cyprus and Malta across weeks according to the different doses.
Figure 3(A) Comparative assessment of the weekly first dose vaccination coverage by age groups in Cyprus and Malta. (B) Comparative assessment of the weekly full vaccination coverage by age groups in Cyprus and Malta.
Comparisons between Cyprus and Malta for the initiation of vaccination appointment by age groups.
| Priority Groups Schedule | ||
|---|---|---|
| Initiation of Vaccination Appointments | Cyprus | Malta |
| 27 December 2020 | Healthcare workers | Healthcare workers and long-term care facility |
| 11 January 2021 | Persons living in long-term care facilities—elderly and mental health, and 85+ years | |
| 27 January 2021 | 88+ years | |
| 29 January 2021 | 86+ years | |
| 1 February 2021 | 84+ years | All other frontliners and 80–85 years |
| 3 February 2021 | 83+ years | |
| 8 February 2021 | Vulnerable population * | |
| 9 February 2021 | 75–79 years | |
| 17 February 2021 | 74+ years | |
| 23 February 2021 | 71+ years | |
| 24 February 2021 | Staff at schools and child-care centers | |
| 1 March 2021 | 70–80 years | |
| 3 March 2021 | 69+ years | |
| 6 March 2021 | 60+ years | |
| 9 March 2021 | 67+ years | |
| 20 March 2021 | 66+ years | |
| 29 March 2021 | Diabetes and Obese | |
| 1 April 2021 | 64+ years | |
| 7 April 2021 | 61–63 years | |
| 9 April 2021 | 59–60 years | |
| 10 April 2021 | 57–58 years | 50+ years |
| 11 April 2021 | Specific vulnerable groups | |
| 13 April 2021 | 55–56 years | |
| 16April 2021 | 53–54 years | |
| 19 April 2021 | Bedridden patients | |
| 21 April 2021 | 51–52 years | |
| 23 April 2021 | 40+ years | |
| 26 April 2021 | 43–44 years | |
| 27 April 2021 | 42 years | |
| 28 April 2021 | 41 years | |
| 29 April 2021 | 39–40 years | |
| 4 May 2021 | 37–38 years | |
| 5 May 2021 | 30 + years | |
| 6 May 2021 | 35–36 years | |
| 7 May 2021 | 33–34 years | |
| 9 May 2021 | 31–32 years | |
| 10 May 2021 | 29–30 years | |
| 11 May 2021 | 27–28 years | |
| 12 May 2021 | 25–26 years | |
| 19 May 2021 | 16+ years | |
| 7 June 2021 | 23–27 years | |
| 9 June 2021 | 18–22 years | |
| 16 June 2021 | 12+ years | |
| 18 June 2021 | 18+ years | |
* insulin-dependent diabetics; immunosuppressed; cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy; people treated for cancer in the last six month; patients on dialysis; those admitted to hospital for respiratory problems; patients suffering from cardiac disease or who attend the heart failure clinic; people with Down's syndrome; people who use a BiPap machine.