Centre for Public Health Data Science, Institute of Health Informatics, University College London, London, UK.
Office for Health Improvement and Disparities, UK Department of Health and Social Care, London, UK.
Lancet. 2022 Nov;400 Suppl 1:S5. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(22)02215-2. Epub 2022 Nov 24.
COVID-19 has highlighted severe health inequities experienced by certain migrants. Despite evidence suggesting that migrants are at risk of under-immunisation, data are limited for migrants' COVID-19 vaccine uptake in England.
We did a retrospective population-based cohort study on COVID-19 vaccination uptake in England. We linked the Million Migrant cohort (which includes non-EU migrants and resettled refugees) to the national COVID-19 vaccination dataset, using a stepwise deterministic matching procedure adapted from NHS Digital, and compared migrants with the general population. For migrants who linked to at least one vaccination record, we estimate temporal trends in first dose uptake and differences in second and third dose uptake and consequent delays between Dec 8, 2020, and April 20, 2022, by age, visa type, and ethnicity.
Of the 465 470 migrants who linked to one or more vaccination record, 427 073 (91·8%) received a second dose and 238 721 (51·3%) received a third. Migrants (>30 years) reached 75% first-dose coverage between 1 and 2 weeks after the general population in England, with the gap widening to 6 weeks for younger migrants (16-29 years). Refugees specifically had a higher risk of a delayed second dose (odds ratio 1·75 [95 CI% 1·62-1·88]) and third dose (1·41 [1·31-1·53]). Older migrants (>65 years) were at least four times more likely to have not received their second or third dose compared with those of the same age in England.
Uptake of the first dose was slower across all age groups for migrants compared with the general population. Refugees and older migrants were more likely to have delayed uptake of COVID-19 vaccines and to not have received their second or third dose. Policymakers, researchers, and practitioners should consider how to best drive uptake of COVID-19 and other routine vaccine doses and understand and address personal and structural barriers to vaccination systems for diverse migrant populations.
Wellcome Trust and UK Research and Innovation.
COVID-19 凸显了某些移民所经历的严重健康不平等现象。尽管有证据表明移民面临免疫不足的风险,但有关移民在英格兰 COVID-19 疫苗接种率的数据有限。
我们在英格兰进行了一项基于人群的 COVID-19 疫苗接种率回顾性队列研究。我们使用 NHS Digital 改编的逐步确定性匹配程序,将百万移民队列(包括非欧盟移民和重新安置的难民)与全国 COVID-19 疫苗接种数据集联系起来,并将移民与一般人群进行比较。对于与至少一个疫苗接种记录相关联的移民,我们根据年龄、签证类型和族裔估计了 2020 年 12 月 8 日至 2022 年 4 月 20 日期间第一剂接种率的时间趋势,以及第二剂和第三剂接种率的差异以及随后的延迟。
在与一个或多个疫苗接种记录相关联的 465470 名移民中,427073 人(91.8%)接种了第二剂,238721 人(51.3%)接种了第三剂。年龄在 30 岁以上的移民在英格兰普通人群接种第一剂疫苗后 1 至 2 周内达到 75%的第一剂疫苗覆盖率,而年龄较小的移民(16-29 岁)的差距扩大到 6 周。难民的第二剂(比值比 1.75 [95%置信区间 1.62-1.88])和第三剂(1.41 [1.31-1.53])接种风险更高。与英格兰同年龄的移民相比,年龄在 65 岁以上的移民至少有四倍的可能性未接种第二剂或第三剂疫苗。
与普通人群相比,所有年龄组的移民第一剂疫苗接种速度都较慢。难民和老年移民更有可能延迟接种 COVID-19 疫苗,并且没有接种第二剂或第三剂疫苗。政策制定者、研究人员和从业者应考虑如何最好地推动 COVID-19 疫苗和其他常规疫苗剂量的接种,并了解和解决不同移民群体接种疫苗系统的个人和结构性障碍。
惠康信托基金和英国研究与创新。