Comparing demographics, clinical characteristics, and hospital outcomes by vaccine uptake status: A single-institution cross-sectional study

Author:

Chen Claire Xinning1,Cabugao Paul2,Nguyen Max1,Villegas Daniel2,Batra Kavita34,Singh Aditi1,Kioka Mutsumi5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV, USA

2. Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV, USA

3. Office of Research, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV, USA

4. Department of Medical Education and Office of Academic Affairs, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV, USA

5. Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV, USA.

Abstract

Vaccination against Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been the cornerstone of reducing morbidity and mortality of this disease, as it has been shown to decrease the risk of viral transmission, severity of disease, hospitalization, and intubation. However, true understanding of its impact is skewed by heterogeneous vaccine administration due to lack of equitable access, vaccine hesitancy, and varying social determinants of health. Therefore, this study aims to identify groups that are less likely to be vaccinated and understand whether the resultant differences in vaccination rates affect morbidity and mortality in socially marginalized COVID-19 patients. A retrospective cohort analysis was performed on a randomized and stratified population of 939 COVID-19 patients from January 2021 to December 2021. Bivariate analysis and logistic regression were used to assess demographic and clinical characteristic trends in unvaccinated, partially vaccinated, and fully vaccinated groups. No one age (P = .21), gender (P = .9), race (P = .12), ethnicity (P = .09), or health insurance status (P = .13) group was more vaccinated than the other. Similarly, no subgroup was at increased odds of intubation (P = .08) or death. However, patients with all categories of comorbidities including cardiopulmonary disease (P = <.001, effect size .17), renal disease (P = <.001, effect size 0.138), metabolic disease (P = .04), and immunocompromised (P = .01) states were found to have significantly higher vaccination rates. Our study also shows that full vaccination protects against mortality and decreases the odds of intubation by 55% (adjusted odds ratio = 0.453, P value = .015) compared to no vaccination or partial vaccination. Findings from this study show an encouraging trend that sicker patients had higher rates of vaccination against COVID-19. This trend highlights the need for further identification of motivators that may be applied to vaccine-hesitant populations, which can help guide population-level policy, increase vaccination campaign yield, and reach for health equity.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine

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