Vaccine rollout strategies: The case for vaccinating essential workers early

PLOS Glob Public Health. 2021 Oct 13;1(10):e0000020. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000020. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

In vaccination campaigns against COVID-19, many jurisdictions are using age-based rollout strategies, reflecting the much higher risk of severe outcomes of infection in older groups. In the wake of growing evidence that approved vaccines are effective at preventing not only adverse outcomes, but also infection, we show that such strategies are less effective than strategies that prioritize essential workers. This conclusion holds across numerous outcomes, including cases, hospitalizations, Long COVID (cases with symptoms lasting longer than 28 days), deaths and net monetary benefit. Our analysis holds in regions where the vaccine supply is limited, and rollout is prolonged for several months. In such a setting with a population of 5M, we estimate that vaccinating essential workers sooner prevents over 200,000 infections, over 600 deaths, and produces a net monetary benefit of over $500M.

Grants and funding

NM, PT, and CC were supported by Natural Science and Engineering Research Council (Canada) Discovery Grants (RGPIN-2019-06911 and RGPIN-2019-06624). CC receives funding from the Federal Government of Canada's Canada 150 Research Chair program and from Genome BC (COV-142). CM and EK were supported financially and in-kind by Alberta Health, through the Alberta Health / IHE Partnership Grant #008491 2018-21. No author received payment or services from any third party for any aspect of this work. Funders had no role in the study design, preparation or analysis.