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The quantification of vaccine uptake in the Nordic countries and impact on key indicators of COVID-19 severity and healthcare stress level via age range comparative analysis

The quantification of vaccine uptake in the Nordic countries and impact on key indicators of COVID-19 severity and healthcare stress level via age range comparative analysis
The quantification of vaccine uptake in the Nordic countries and impact on key indicators of COVID-19 severity and healthcare stress level via age range comparative analysis
In this paper we analyze the impact of vaccinations on spread of the COVID-19 virus for different age groups. More specifically, we examine the deployment of vaccines in the Nordic countries in a comparative analysis where we focus on factors such as healthcare stress level and severity of disease through new infections, hospitalizations, intensive care unit (ICU) occupancy and deaths. Moreover, we analyze the impact of the various vaccine types, vaccination rate on the spread of the virus in each age group for Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden from the start of the vaccination period in December 2020 until the end of September 2021. We perform a threefold analysis: (i) frequency analysis of infections and vaccine rates by age groups; (ii) rolling correlations between vaccination strategies, severity of COVID-19 and healthcare stress level and; (iii) we also employ the epidemic Renormalization Group (eRG) framework. The eRG is used to mathematically model wave structures, as well as the impact of vaccinations on wave dynamics. We further compare the Nordic countries with England. Our main results outline the quantification of the impact of the vaccination campaigns on age groups epidemiological data, across countries with high vaccine uptake. The data clearly shows that vaccines markedly reduce the number of new cases and the risk of serious illness.
2045-2322
Islind, Anna Sigridur
aefc8cda-7d3e-4367-bfca-e9a2261fe87f
Oskarsdottir, Maria
d159ed8f-9dd3-4ff3-8b00-d43579ab71be
Cot, Corentin
f49a8c8e-8d05-4bbb-8f66-00034c04ef2b
Cacciapaglia, Giacomo
df69e7d0-e326-4864-92cb-1d96697b274e
Sannino, Francesco
767a62d6-0fda-4ac4-8a85-37cfab28dc48
Islind, Anna Sigridur
aefc8cda-7d3e-4367-bfca-e9a2261fe87f
Oskarsdottir, Maria
d159ed8f-9dd3-4ff3-8b00-d43579ab71be
Cot, Corentin
f49a8c8e-8d05-4bbb-8f66-00034c04ef2b
Cacciapaglia, Giacomo
df69e7d0-e326-4864-92cb-1d96697b274e
Sannino, Francesco
767a62d6-0fda-4ac4-8a85-37cfab28dc48

Islind, Anna Sigridur, Oskarsdottir, Maria, Cot, Corentin, Cacciapaglia, Giacomo and Sannino, Francesco (2022) The quantification of vaccine uptake in the Nordic countries and impact on key indicators of COVID-19 severity and healthcare stress level via age range comparative analysis. Scientific Reports, 12 (1), [16891]. (doi:10.1038/s41598-022-21055-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In this paper we analyze the impact of vaccinations on spread of the COVID-19 virus for different age groups. More specifically, we examine the deployment of vaccines in the Nordic countries in a comparative analysis where we focus on factors such as healthcare stress level and severity of disease through new infections, hospitalizations, intensive care unit (ICU) occupancy and deaths. Moreover, we analyze the impact of the various vaccine types, vaccination rate on the spread of the virus in each age group for Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden from the start of the vaccination period in December 2020 until the end of September 2021. We perform a threefold analysis: (i) frequency analysis of infections and vaccine rates by age groups; (ii) rolling correlations between vaccination strategies, severity of COVID-19 and healthcare stress level and; (iii) we also employ the epidemic Renormalization Group (eRG) framework. The eRG is used to mathematically model wave structures, as well as the impact of vaccinations on wave dynamics. We further compare the Nordic countries with England. Our main results outline the quantification of the impact of the vaccination campaigns on age groups epidemiological data, across countries with high vaccine uptake. The data clearly shows that vaccines markedly reduce the number of new cases and the risk of serious illness.

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s41598-022-21055-0 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 September 2022
Published date: 7 October 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498252
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498252
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: 6adaf3af-4279-4d7c-ad01-03be0b031b77
ORCID for Maria Oskarsdottir: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5095-5356

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Date deposited: 13 Feb 2025 17:30
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Anna Sigridur Islind
Author: Maria Oskarsdottir ORCID iD
Author: Corentin Cot
Author: Giacomo Cacciapaglia
Author: Francesco Sannino

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