Gebremariam Aregawi Gebremedhin, Genie Mesfin, Le Huong, Attwell Katie, Liu Bette, Regan Annette K, Beard Frank H, Macartney Kristine, Paolucci Francesco, Moore Hannah Catherine, Blyth Christopher C
Newcastle Business School, The University of Newcastle Australia, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Department of Public Health, Policy and Systems, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
BMJ Open. 2025 Jul 7;15(7):e097412. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-097412.
Vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 was a crucial public health measure during the COVID-19 pandemic. Among the multiple strategies developed to increase vaccine uptake, governments often employed vaccine mandates. However, little evidence exists globally about the impact of these mandates and their subsequent removal on vaccine uptake, including in Australia, France, Italy and the USA. The aim of this study is to provide a protocol to evaluate and quantify the impact of COVID-19 vaccine mandates and removals on vaccine uptake in these countries, with a specific focus on comparing Australian policies with those from Europe and the USA. Actualising the work outlined in this protocol will help to provide policy and technical guidance for future pandemic preparedness and routine immunisation programmes.
This protocol outlines a retrospective study using existing data sources including Australian Immunisation Register-Person Level Integrated Data Asset for Australia and publicly available data for France, Italy and California (USA). Causal inference methods such as interrupted time series, regression discontinuity design, difference-in-differences, matching and synthetic control will be employed to assess the estimated effects of vaccine mandates and removals on vaccine uptake.
The University of Newcastle's human research ethics committee has approved the study (reference number: H-2024-0160). Peer-reviewed papers will be submitted, and results will be presented at public health, immunisation and health economic conferences nationally and internationally. A lay summary will be published on the MandEval website.
在新冠疫情期间,接种新冠病毒疫苗是一项至关重要的公共卫生措施。在为提高疫苗接种率而制定的多种策略中,政府经常采用疫苗强制令。然而,在全球范围内,关于这些强制令及其随后取消对疫苗接种率的影响的证据很少,包括在澳大利亚、法国、意大利和美国。本研究的目的是提供一个方案,以评估和量化新冠疫苗强制令及取消措施对这些国家疫苗接种率的影响,特别侧重于将澳大利亚的政策与欧洲和美国的政策进行比较。落实本方案中概述的工作将有助于为未来的疫情防范和常规免疫计划提供政策和技术指导。
本方案概述了一项回顾性研究,使用现有的数据源,包括澳大利亚免疫登记册——澳大利亚个人层面综合数据资产,以及法国、意大利和美国加利福尼亚州的公开可用数据。将采用中断时间序列、回归断点设计、差分法、匹配法和合成控制法等因果推断方法,来评估疫苗强制令及取消措施对疫苗接种率的估计影响。
纽卡斯尔大学的人类研究伦理委员会已批准该研究(参考编号:H - 2024 - 0160)。将提交经过同行评审的论文,并在国内和国际的公共卫生、免疫和卫生经济会议上展示研究结果。还将在MandEval网站上发布一份通俗易懂的总结。