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Impact of the COVID-19 Vaccination Program on case incidence, emergency department visits, and hospital admissions among children aged 5-17 Years during the Delta and Omicron Periods-United States, December 2020 to April 2022. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • National studies indicate that COVID-19 vaccination coverage positively affects health outcomes in adults, but its effects on children are less clear.
  • An analysis of children aged 5-17 demonstrated that higher pediatric vaccination coverage relates to significantly lower rates of COVID-19 cases, emergency department visits, and hospital admissions, particularly during the Delta variant period.
  • The effectiveness of vaccines in reducing health impacts was stronger during the Delta wave, while the benefits diminished during the Omicron period, highlighting the need for promoting pediatric vaccinations despite potential limitations against evolving virus variants.

Article Abstract

Background: In the United States, national ecological studies suggest a positive impact of COVID-19 vaccination coverage on outcomes in adults. However, the national impact of the vaccination program on COVID-19 in children remains unknown. To determine the association of COVID-19 vaccination with U.S. case incidence, emergency department visits, and hospital admissions for pediatric populations during the Delta and Omicron periods.

Methods: We conducted an ecological analysis among children aged 5-17 and compared incidence rate ratios (RRs) of COVID-19 cases, emergency department visits, and hospital admissions by pediatric vaccine coverage, with jurisdictions in the highest vaccine coverage quartile as the reference.

Results: RRs comparing states with lowest pediatric vaccination coverage to the highest pediatric vaccination coverage were 2.00 and 0.64 for cases, 2.96 and 1.11 for emergency department visits, and 2.76 and 1.01 for hospital admissions among all children during the Delta and Omicron periods, respectively. During the 3-week peak period of the Omicron wave, only children aged 12-15 and 16-17 years in the states with the lowest versus highest coverage, had a significantly higher rate of emergency department visits (RR = 1.39 and RR = 1.34, respectively).

Conclusions: COVID-19 vaccines were associated with lower case incidence, emergency department visits and hospital admissions among children during the Delta period but the association was weaker during the Omicron period. Pediatric COVID-19 vaccination should be promoted as part of a program to decrease COVID-19 impact among children; however, vaccine effectiveness may be limited when available vaccines do not match circulating viral variants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9733849PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0276409PLOS

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