Can a vaccine-led approach end NSW’s outbreak in 100 days, or at least substantially reduce morbidity and mortality?
Can a vaccine-led approach end NSW’s outbreak in 100 days, or at least substantially reduce morbidity and mortality?
Abstract Background and AimsThe New South Wales (NSW) COVID-19 outbreak is at 478 daily cases on August 16, 2021.Our aims were to:estimate the time required to reach ≤5 cases per day under three lockdown strengths (weak, moderate, strong), and four vaccination rollouts: (a) per the original plan, (b) prioritizing essential workers, (c) b plus rapid vaccination of 25% of <60-year-olds with AstraZeneca (AZ25), and (d) b plus rapid vaccination of 50% of <60-year-olds with AstraZeneca (AZ50).estimate the number of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths in the 100 days after 1/August for the 12 scenarios. MethodsAn agent-based model was adapted to NSW and the Delta variant. Hospitalization and mortality rates for unvaccinated COVID-19 infections were doubled given the virulence of Delta. ResultsThe business-as-usual rollout fully vaccinates 50%, 70% and 80% of >16-year-olds by 10/Oct, 21/Nov, and 28/Dec, respectively. This reduced to 1/Oct, 30/Oct, and 22/Nov for the fastest (AZ50) rollout.A strong lockdown with a rapid vaccine rollout was the fastest to reach ≤5 cases (14-day average), with a median of 78 days (90% Uncertainty interval 61 - 103) or 18/Oct, compared to 207 days (166 - 254) or 24/Feb for a weak lockdown with no rollout acceleration. Increased lockdown strength had more impact than rollout acceleration.Under the AZ25 vaccination scenario, there were 1,440 (90% UI 262 - 10,600 deaths in the first 100 days of cases under a weak lockdown, compared to 71 (90% UI 26 - 178) under a strong lockdown scenario. ConclusionNSW will likely achieve 70% vaccination of >16-year-olds before reaching ≤5 daily cases. Accelerating the vaccine rollout is important for the medium-term, but in the short-term increased restriction strength was more effective at reducing caseload (and subsequently mortality and hospitalisation) than accelerating the vaccine rollout. Significance of Study“The known” NSW is facing a Delta-variant COVID-19 outbreak, with a vaccination-led strategy for controlling the outbreak. Despite the increased infectivity and virulence of the Delta-variant, little contemporaneous modelling exists. We, therefore, model several restrictions and vaccination scenarios.“The new” NSW will likely achieve 70% vaccination of >16-year-olds before daily cases are ≤5. Increased lockdown strength was more effective at reducing cases than accelerating the vaccine rollout.“The implications” Accelerating the vaccine rollout is important in the medium-term, but in the short-term strong public health and social restrictions (including lockdown) are more effective at reining in cases.
Blakely Tony、Thompson Jason、Sundararajan Vijaya、Wilson Tim、Bablani Laxman、Ait Ouakrim Driss、Andrabi Hassan、Abraham Patrick
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Blakely Tony,Thompson Jason,Sundararajan Vijaya,Wilson Tim,Bablani Laxman,Ait Ouakrim Driss,Andrabi Hassan,Abraham Patrick.Can a vaccine-led approach end NSW’s outbreak in 100 days, or at least substantially reduce morbidity and mortality?[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-06-15].https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.08.18.21262252.点此复制
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