Right to Care, Centurion, Pretoria, South Africa.
S Afr Med J. 2022 Feb 1;112(2):13501.
In South Africa (SA), >2.4 million cases of COVID‑19 and >72 000 deaths were recorded between March 2020 and 1 August 2021, affecting the country's 52 districts to various extents. SA has committed to a COVID‑19 vaccine roll-out in three phases, prioritising frontline workers, the elderly, people with comorbidities and essential workers. However, additional actions will be necessary to support efficient allocation and equitable access for vulnerable, access-constrained communities.
To explore various determinants of disease severity, resurgence risk and accessibility in order to aid an equitable, effective vaccine roll-out for SA that would maximise COVID‑19 epidemic control by reducing the number of COVID‑19 transmissions and resultant deaths, while at the same time reducing the risk of vaccine wastage.
For the 52 districts of SA, 26 COVID‑19 indicators such as hospital admissions, deaths in hospital and mobility were ranked and hierarchically clustered with cases to identify which indicators can be used as indicators for severity or resurgence risk. Districts were then ranked using the estimated COVID‑19 severity and resurgence risk to assist with prioritisation of vaccine roll-out. Urban and rural accessibility were also explored as factors that could limit vaccine roll-out in hard-to-reach communities.
Highly populated urban districts showed the most cases. Districts such as Buffalo City, City of Cape Town and Nelson Mandela Bay experienced very severe first and second waves of the pandemic. Districts with high mobility, population size and density were found to be at highest risk of resurgence. In terms of accessibility, we found that 47.2% of the population are within 5 km of a hospital with ≥50 beds, and this percentage ranged from 87.0% in City of Cape Town to 0% in Namakwa district.
The end goal is to provide equal distribution of vaccines proportional to district populations, which will provide fair protection. Districts with a high risk of resurgence and severity should be prioritised for vaccine roll-out, particularly the major metropolitan areas. We provide recommendations for allocations of different vaccine types for each district that consider levels of access, numbers of doses and cold-chain storage capability.
在南非(SA),2020 年 3 月至 2021 年 8 月 1 日期间,记录了超过 240 万例 COVID-19 病例和超过 72000 例死亡,这对该国的 52 个地区造成了不同程度的影响。SA 已承诺分三个阶段推出 COVID-19 疫苗,优先为一线工作人员、老年人、患有合并症的人和必要工作人员接种。然而,为了支持弱势、难以获得疫苗的社区进行有效分配和公平获取疫苗,还需要采取额外的行动。
为了探索疾病严重程度、再次爆发风险和可及性的各种决定因素,以便为南非推出公平、有效的疫苗提供帮助,通过减少 COVID-19 的传播和由此产生的死亡人数,最大限度地控制 COVID-19 疫情,同时降低疫苗浪费的风险。
对南非的 52 个地区,对 26 个 COVID-19 指标(如住院人数、医院死亡人数和流动性)进行了排名和层次聚类,并对病例进行聚类,以确定哪些指标可用作严重程度或再次爆发风险的指标。然后使用估计的 COVID-19 严重程度和再次爆发风险对各地区进行排名,以协助疫苗推出的优先级排序。城市和农村的可达性也被视为限制难以到达的社区疫苗推出的因素进行了探讨。
人口稠密的城市地区显示出最多的病例。布法罗市、开普敦市和纳尔逊·曼德拉湾市等地区经历了第一波和第二波大流行。发现移动性、人口规模和密度高的地区再次爆发的风险最高。在可达性方面,我们发现 47.2%的人口距离拥有≥50 张病床的医院在 5 公里以内,这一比例从开普敦市的 87.0%到纳马夸区的 0%不等。
最终目标是根据地区人口比例平等分配疫苗,以提供公平保护。应优先为再次爆发风险和严重程度高的地区推出疫苗,特别是主要大都市区。我们为每个地区提供了不同类型疫苗的分配建议,考虑了可达性水平、疫苗剂量和冷链储存能力。