Centre for Immunization and Respiratory Infectious Diseases (Zhao, Ismail, Tunis), Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Ont.; Metro City Medical Clinic (Ismail), Edmonton, Alta.
CMAJ Open. 2021 Sep 7;9(3):E848-E854. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20200241. Print 2021 Jul-Sep.
When vaccine supplies are anticipated to be limited, necessitating the vaccination of certain groups earlier than others, the assessment of values and preferences of stakeholders is an important component of an ethically sound vaccine prioritization framework. The objective of this study was to conduct a priority-setting exercise to establish an expert stakeholder perspective on the relative importance of COVID-19 vaccination strategies in Canada.
The priority-setting exercise included a survey of stakeholders that was conducted from July 22 to Aug. 14, 2020. Stakeholders included clinical and public health expert groups, provincial and territorial committees and national Indigenous groups, patient and community advocacy representatives and experts, health professional associations and federal government departments. Survey results were analyzed to identify trends.
Of 155 stakeholders contacted, 76 surveys were received for a participation rate of 49%. During a period of anticipated initial vaccine scarcity for all pandemic scenarios, stakeholders generally considered the most important vaccination strategy to be protecting those who are most vulnerable to severe illness and death from COVID-19. This was followed in importance by strategies to protect health care capacity, minimize transmission of SARS-CoV-2 and protect critical infrastructure.
This priority-setting exercise established that there is general alignment in the values and preferences across stakeholder groups: the most important vaccination strategy at the time of limited initial vaccine availability is to protect those who are most vulnerable. The findings of this priority-setting exercise provided a timely expert perspective to guide early public health planning for COVID-19 vaccines.
当预计疫苗供应有限,需要优先为某些群体接种疫苗时,评估利益相关者的价值观和偏好是制定合理疫苗优先框架的重要组成部分。本研究的目的是进行一项优先排序工作,以建立加拿大对 COVID-19 疫苗接种策略相对重要性的专家利益相关者观点。
优先排序工作包括一项于 2020 年 7 月 22 日至 8 月 14 日进行的利益相关者调查。利益相关者包括临床和公共卫生专家组、省和地区委员会以及国家土著群体、患者和社区倡导代表和专家、卫生专业协会和联邦政府部门。对调查结果进行分析以确定趋势。
在联系的 155 个利益相关者中,收到了 76 份调查,参与率为 49%。在所有大流行情况下预计最初疫苗短缺的时期,利益相关者普遍认为最重要的疫苗接种策略是保护那些最容易因 COVID-19 而患上严重疾病和死亡的人。其次是保护医疗保健能力、最大限度减少 SARS-CoV-2 的传播和保护关键基础设施的策略。
这项优先排序工作表明,利益相关者群体之间的价值观和偏好存在普遍一致:在初始疫苗供应有限的情况下,最重要的疫苗接种策略是保护最脆弱的人群。这项优先排序工作的结果为 COVID-19 疫苗的早期公共卫生规划提供了及时的专家观点。