Abstract
The COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) is an initiative led by the World Health Organization (WHO) and other partners that aims for an equitable access of COVID-19 vaccines. Despite a potential heterogeneous disease burden across space, countries receiving allotments of vaccines via COVAX may want to follow WHO's allocation rule and distribute vaccines to their jurisdictions based on the jurisdictions' relative population size. Utilizing economic–epidemiological modeling, we benchmark the performance of this ad hoc allocation rule by comparing it to the rule that minimizes the economic damages and expenditures over time, including a penalty cost representing the social costs of deviating from the ad hoc allocation. Under different levels of vaccine scarcity and different demographic characteristics, we consider scenarios where length of immunity and compliance to travel restrictions vary, and consider the robustness of the rules when assumptions regarding these factors are incorrect. The benefits from deviating are especially high when immunity is permanent, when there is compliance to travel restrictions, when the supply of vaccine is low, and when there is heterogeneity in demographic characteristics. Interestingly, a lack of compliance to travel restrictions pushes the optimal allocations of vaccine towards the ad hoc and improves the relative robustness of the ad hoc rule, as the mixing of the populations reduces the spatial heterogeneity in disease burden.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference84 articles.
1. Emanuel E , Persad G , Upshur R , Thome B , Parker M , Glickman A , et al. Fair Allocation of Scarce Medical Resources in the Time of COVID-19. The New England Journal of Medicine. 2020.
2. Roope LS , Buckell J , Becker F , Candio P , Violato M , Sindelar JL , et al. How Should a Safe and Effective COVID-19 Vaccine be Allocated? Health Economists Need to be Ready to Take the Baton. PharmacoEconomics-Open. 2020:1–5.
3. Buckner JH , Chowell G , Springborn MR . Dynamic Prioritization of COVID-19 Vaccines When Social Distancing is Limited for Essential Workers. medRxiv. 2020.
4. Emanuel EJ , Persad G , Kern A , Buchanan A , Fabre C , Halliday D , et al. An ethical framework for global vaccine allocation. Science (New York, NY). 2020:eabe2803.
5. Liu Y , Salwi S , Drolet B. Multivalue ethical framework for fair global allocation of a COVID-19 vaccine. Journal of Medical Ethics. 2020.
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献