Modelling the effect of COVID-19 mass vaccination on acute hospital admissions

Author:

Booton Ross D1,Powell Anna L2,Turner Katy M E13,Wood Richard M234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, 5 Tyndall Avenue, Bristol, BS8 1UD, UK

2. Modelling and Analytics, UK National Health Service (BNSSG CCG), 360 Bristol, Marlborough Street, BS3 1NX, UK

3. Health Data Research UK South West Better Care Partnership, Bristol, BS, UK

4. School of Management, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath, BA2 7AY, UK

Abstract

Abstract Background Managing high levels of acute COVID-19 bed occupancy can affect the quality of care provided to both affected patients and those requiring other hospital services. Mass vaccination has offered a route to reduce societal restrictions while protecting hospitals from being overwhelmed. Yet, early in the mass vaccination effort, the possible impact on future bed pressures remained subject to considerable uncertainty. Objective The aim of this study was to model the effect of vaccination on projections of acute and intensive care bed demand within a 1 million resident healthcare system located in South West England. Methods An age-structured epidemiological model of the susceptible–exposed–infectious–recovered type was fitted to local data up to the time of the study, in early March 2021. Model parameters and vaccination scenarios were calibrated through a system-wide multidisciplinary working group, comprising public health intelligence specialists, healthcare planners, epidemiologists and academics. Scenarios assumed incremental relaxations to societal restrictions according to the envisaged UK Government timeline, with all restrictions to be removed by 21 June 2021. Results Achieving 95% vaccine uptake in adults by 31 July 2021 would not avert the third wave in autumn 2021 but would produce a median peak bed requirement ∼6% (IQR: 1–24%) of that experienced during the second wave (January 2021). A 2-month delay in vaccine rollout would lead to significantly higher peak bed occupancy, at 66% (11–146%) of that of the second wave. If only 75% uptake was achieved (the amount typically associated with vaccination campaigns), then the second wave peak for acute and intensive care beds would be exceeded by 4% and 19%, respectively, an amount which would seriously pressure hospital capacity. Conclusion Modelling influenced decision-making among senior managers in setting COVID-19 bed capacity levels, as well as highlighting the importance of public health in promoting high vaccine uptake among the population. Forecast accuracy has since been supported by actual data collected following the analysis, with observed peak bed occupancy falling comfortably within the inter-quartile range of modelled projections.

Funder

NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Behavioural Science and Evaluation

Health Data Research UK

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,General Medicine

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