The Lancet Regional Health. Western Pacific (Oct 2021)

COVID-19 vaccine strategies for Aotearoa New Zealand: a mathematical modelling study

  • Trung Nguyen, PhD,
  • Mehnaz Adnan, PhD,
  • Binh P Nguyen, PhD,
  • Joep de Ligt, PhD,
  • Jemma L Geoghegan, PhD,
  • Richard Dean, MSc,
  • Sarah Jefferies, MD,
  • Michael G Baker, MBChB,
  • Winston KG Seah, DrEng,
  • Andrew A Sporle, MA(Hons),
  • Nigel Peter French, PhD,
  • David R Murdoch, MD,
  • David Welch, PhD,
  • Colin R Simpson, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15
p. 100256

Abstract

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Summary: Background: COVID-19 elimination measures, including border closures have been applied in New Zealand. We have modelled the potential effect of vaccination programmes for opening borders.Methods: We used a deterministic age-stratified Susceptible, Exposed, Infectious, Recovered (SEIR) model. We minimised spread by varying the age-stratified vaccine allocation to find the minimum herd immunity requirements (the effective reproduction number Reff<1 with closed borders) under various vaccine effectiveness (VE) scenarios and R0 values. We ran two-year open-border simulations for two vaccine strategies: minimising Reff and targeting high-risk groups.Findings: Targeting of high-risk groups will result in lower hospitalisations and deaths in most scenarios. Reaching the herd immunity threshold (HIT) with a vaccine of 90% VE against disease and 80% VE against infection requires at least 86•5% total population uptake for R0=4•5 (with high vaccination coverage for 30–49-year-olds) and 98•1% uptake for R0=6. In a two-year open-border scenario with 10 overseas cases daily and 90% total population vaccine uptake (including 0–15 year olds) with the same vaccine, the strategy of targeting high-risk groups is close to achieving HIT, with an estimated 11,400 total hospitalisations (peak 324 active and 36 new daily cases in hospitals), and 1,030 total deaths.Interpretation: Targeting high-risk groups for vaccination will result in fewer hospitalisations and deaths with open borders compared to targeting reduced transmission. With a highly effective vaccine and a high total uptake, opening borders will result in increasing cases, hospitalisations, and deaths. Other public health and social measures will still be required as part of an effective pandemic response.Funding: This project was funded by the Health Research Council [20/1018].Research in context

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