Economic evaluation of vaccination against COVID‐19: A systematic review

Author:

Zeinab Dolatshahi1,Shahin Nargesi2ORCID,Fateme Mezginejad3,Saeed Bagheri Faradonbeh4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Policy, School of Health Management and Information Sciences Iran University of Medical Sciences Tehran Iran

2. Department of Health Management and Economics, Faculty of Health Ilam University of Medical Sciences Ilam Iran

3. Department of Hematology, School of Allied Medicine, Cellular and Molecular Research Center Birjand University of Medical Sciences Birjan Iran

4. Department of Health Services Management, School of Health Ahvaz Jundishapur University of Medical Science Ahvaz Iran

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsCoronavirus has burdened considerable expenditures on the different health systems. Vaccination programs, the critical solution against pandemic diseases, are known as safe and effective interventions to prevent and control epidemics. We aimed to perform a systematic review to provide economic evidence of the value of different types of vaccines available to combat the Covid‐19 to all health policymakers worldwide.MethodsElectronic searches conducted on Medline/PubMed, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, Scopus, Embase, and other economic evaluation databases. Related and published articles searched up to March 2022 by using keywords such as “Vaccination,” “Covid‐19,” “Cost‐benefit,” “Cost‐utility,” “Cost‐effectiveness,” “Economic Assessment,” and “Economic evaluation.” Followed by choosing the most suitable articles according to inclusion and exclusion criteria, data captured and the results extracted. The quality assessment of the articles performed by the checklist of CHEERS 2022. Finally, 13 articles included in the review.ResultsAll messenger RNA vaccines were dominant with approximately 70% coverage against no vaccination in the primary vaccination program except in one study that looked at booster effects. From a payer's perspective, a dollar invested in a vaccine would be less profitable than from a societal perspective. Therefore, primary mass vaccination can be considered a cost‐effective intervention in primary vaccination to save more lives and produce more positive externalities. However, the cost‐benefit ratio for all vaccines increases when statistical lifetime value and global economic and educational disadvantages are considered.ConclusionThe COVID‐19 primary vaccination programs in regional outbreaks, from a long‐term perspective, will demonstrate substantial cost‐effectiveness. It is suggested that due to the positive externalities of vaccination, primary mass vaccination, with the help of COVAX‐19TM, could be considered a reliable way to combat viral epidemics compared to the loss of individual lives and economic and educational disturbances around the world.

Funder

Ilam University of Medical Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

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