Motivation to participate and experiences of the informed consent process for randomized clinical trials in emergency obstetric care in Uganda

BMC Medical Ethics
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcmedethics/content
(Accessed 7 Aug 2021)

 

Motivation to participate and experiences of the informed consent process for randomized clinical trials in emergency obstetric care in Uganda
Informed consent, whose goal is to assure that participants enter research voluntarily after disclosure of potential risks and benefits, may be impossible or impractical in emergency research. In low resource …
Authors: Dan Kabonge Kaye
Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2021 22:104
Content type: Research article
Published on: 28 July 2021

A scoping review of considerations and practices for benefit sharing in biobanking

BMC Medical Ethics
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcmedethics/content
(Accessed 7 Aug 2021)

 

A scoping review of considerations and practices for benefit sharing in biobanking
Despite the rapid global growth of biobanking over the last few decades, and their potential for the advancement of health research, considerations specific to the sharing of benefits that accrue from biobanks…
Authors: Allan Sudoi, Jantina De Vries and Dorcas Kamuya
Citation: BMC Medical Ethics 2021 22:102
Content type: Research
Published on: 27 July 2021

Evaluation of the safety profile of COVID-19 vaccines: a rapid review

BMC Medicine
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcmed/content
(Accessed 7 Aug 2021)

 

Evaluation of the safety profile of COVID-19 vaccines: a rapid review
The rapid process of research and development and lack of follow-up time post-vaccination aroused great public concern about the safety profile of COVID-19 vaccine candidates. To provide comprehensive overview…
Authors: Qianhui Wu, Matthew Z. Dudley, Xinghui Chen, Xufang Bai, Kaige Dong, Tingyu Zhuang, Daniel Salmon and Hongjie Yu
Citation: BMC Medicine 2021 19:173
Content type: Research article
Published on: 28 July 2021

Onset of effects of non-pharmaceutical interventions on COVID-19 infection rates in 176 countries

BMC Public Health
http://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles
(Accessed 7 Aug 2021)

 

Onset of effects of non-pharmaceutical interventions on COVID-19 infection rates in 176 countries
During the initial phase of the global COVID-19 outbreak, most countries responded with non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs). In this study we investigate the general effectiveness of these NPIs, how long d…
Authors: Ingo W. Nader, Elisabeth L. Zeilinger, Dana Jomar and Clemens Zauchner
Citation: BMC Public Health 2021 21:1472
Content type: Research article
Published on: 28 July 2021

Sexual behaviour, human papillomavirus and its vaccine: a qualitative study of adolescents and parents in Andalusia

BMC Public Health
http://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles
(Accessed 7 Aug 2021)

 

Sexual behaviour, human papillomavirus and its vaccine: a qualitative study of adolescents and parents in Andalusia
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is one of the most common sexually transmitted infections and can be prevented by vaccination. The purpose of this study is to gain a better understanding, by analysing interview res…
Authors: María González-Cano, Francisco Garrido-Peña, Eugenia Gil-Garcia, Marta Lima-Serrano and María Dolores Cano-Caballero
Citation: BMC Public Health 2021 21:1476
Content type: Research article
Published on: 28 July 2021

Factors influencing childhood immunisation uptake in Africa: a systematic review

BMC Public Health
http://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles
(Accessed 7 Aug 2021)

 

Factors influencing childhood immunisation uptake in Africa: a systematic review
Vaccine preventable diseases are still the most common cause of childhood mortality, with an estimated 3 million deaths every year, mainly in Africa and Asia. An estimate of 29% deaths among children aged 1–59…
Authors: Abubakar Nasiru Galadima, Nor Afiah Mohd Zulkefli, Salmiah Md Said and Norliza Ahmad
Citation: BMC Public Health 2021 21:1475
Content type: Research article
Published on: 28 July 2021

An evidence map of randomised controlled trials evaluating genetic therapies

BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine
August 2021 – Volume 26 – 4
https://ebm.bmj.com/content/26/4

 

Evidence synthesis
An evidence map of randomised controlled trials evaluating genetic therapies (10 November, 2020)
Genetic therapies replace or inactivate disease-causing genes or introduce new or modified genes. These therapies have the potential to cure in a single application rather than treating symptoms through repeated administrations. This evidence map provides a broad overview of the genetic therapies that have been evaluated in randomised controlled trials (RCTs) for efficacy and safety.
Eric A. Apaydin, Andrea S. Richardson, Sangita Baxi, Jerry Vockley, Olamigoke Akinniranye, Rachel Ross, Jody Larkin, Aneesa Motala, Gulrez Azhar, Susanne Hempel

Original research: Correlates of intended COVID-19 vaccine acceptance across time and countries: results from a series of cross-sectional surveys

BMJ Open
August 2021 – Volume 11 – 8
https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/8

 

Original research: Correlates of intended COVID-19 vaccine acceptance across time and countries: results from a series of cross-sectional surveys (2 August, 2021)
John R Kerr, Claudia R Schneider, Gabriel Recchia, Sarah Dryhurst, Ullrika Sahlin, Carole Dufouil, Pierre Arwidson, Alexandra LJ Freeman, Sander van der Linden

Collaborative Platform Trials to Fight COVID-19: Methodological and Regulatory Considerations for a Better Societal Outcome

Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics
Volume 110, Issue 2 Pages: 263-518 August 2021
https://ascpt.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/15326535/current

 

Reviews
Free Access
Collaborative Platform Trials to Fight COVID-19: Methodological and Regulatory Considerations for a Better Societal Outcome
Olivier Collignon, Carl-Fredrik Burman, Martin Posch, Anja Schiel
Pages: 311-320
First Published:28 January 2021
Abstract
For the development of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) drugs during the ongoing pandemic, speed is of essence whereas quality of evidence is of paramount importance. Although thousands of COVID-19 trials were rapidly started, many are unlikely to provide robust statistical evidence and meet regulatory standards (e.g., because of lack of randomization or insufficient power). This has led to an inefficient use of time and resources. With more coordination, the sheer number of patients in these trials might have generated convincing data for several investigational treatments. Collaborative platform trials, comparing several drugs to a shared control arm, are an attractive solution. Those trials can utilize a variety of adaptive design features in order to accelerate the finding of life-saving treatments. In this paper, we discuss several possible designs, illustrate them via simulations, and also discuss challenges, such as the heterogeneity of the target population, time-varying standard of care, and the potentially high number of false hypothesis rejections in phase II and phase III trials. We provide corresponding regulatory perspectives on approval and reimbursement, and note that the optimal design of a platform trial will differ with our societal objective and by stakeholder. Hasty approvals may delay the development of better alternatives, whereas searching relentlessly for the single most efficacious treatment may indirectly diminish the number of lives saved as time is lost. We point out the need for incentivizing developers to participate in collaborative evidence-generation initiatives when a positive return on investment is not met.

Coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination in transplant recipients

Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases
August 2021 – Volume 34 – Issue 4
https://journals.lww.com/co-infectiousdiseases/pages/currenttoc.aspx

 

INFECTIONS OF THE IMMUNOCOMPROMISED HOST
Coronavirus disease 2019 vaccination in transplant recipients
Eberhardt, Christiane S.; Balletto, Elisa; Cornberg, Markus; More
Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases. 34(4):275-287, August 2021.

Supplement: E-Mental-Health: Exploring the Evidence Base and Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Internet-Based Interventions for the Prevention of Mental Health Conditions

The European Journal of Public Health
SUPPLEMENT – Volume 31, Issue Supplement_1, July 2021
https://academic.oup.com/eurpub/issue/31/Supplement_1

 

Supplement: E-Mental-Health: Exploring the Evidence Base and Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Internet-Based Interventions for the Prevention of Mental Health Conditions
Mental illness represents an enormous personal, social and societal burden for European citizens1 calling for the need to expand existing models of mental healthcare delivery. In Europe, the Internet is a key source of health information,2 and technology-enhanced (psychological) interventions such as Internet- and mobile-delivered applications (‘eHealth’3 and ‘m-Health’4) have become increasingly popular and studied. There is already strong evidence of the efficacy of online interventions for the prevention and treatment of several psychological disorders5,6 and meta-analyses show effect sizes similar to face-to-face interventions.7

Looking in the medicine cabinet: methods for using real-world data to assess the impact of measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) and recombinant adjuvanted varicella-zoster vaccines on coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) prevention and case fatality

Gates Open Research
https://gatesopenresearch.org/browse/articles
[Accessed 7 Aug 2021]

 

Method Article metrics AWAITING PEER REVIEW
Looking in the medicine cabinet: methods for using real-world data to assess the impact of measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) and recombinant adjuvanted varicella-zoster vaccines on coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) prevention and case fatality [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]
Douglas McNair, Hao Hu, Casey Selwyn
Peer Reviewers Invited
PUBLISHED 30 Jul 2021

How modelling can help steer the course set by the World Health Organization 2021-2030 roadmap on neglected tropical diseases

Gates Open Research
https://gatesopenresearch.org/browse/articles
[Accessed 7 Aug 2021]

 

Open Letter metrics AWAITING PEER REVIEW
How modelling can help steer the course set by the World Health Organization 2021-2030 roadmap on neglected tropical diseases [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]
Jessica Clark, Wilma A. Stolk, María-Gloria Basáñez, Luc E. Coffeng, Zulma M. Cucunubá, Matthew A. Dixon, Louise Dyson, Katie Hampson, Michael Marks, Graham F. Medley, Timothy M. Pollington, Joaquin M. Prada, Kat S. Rock, Henrik Salje, Jaspreet Toor, T. Déirdre Hollingsworth
Peer Reviewers Invited
Funders
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office
European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP2) programme
MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis
UK Department for International Development
UK Medical Research Council
PUBLISHED 27 Jul 2021

Politics and pandemics

Global Public Health
Volume 16, Issue 8-9 (2021)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rgph20/current

 

Politics and pandemics
This Special Issue of Global Public Health on Politics & Pandemics brings together 26 articles and commentaries that address diverse aspects of the politics of COVID-19 and related issues. These papers are grouped together in six topical areas: theories and politics of global health, health systems and policies, country responses, social inequalities, social responses, and the politics of science and technology. The goal of the Special Issue is to give readers a sense of the range of topics that have been a focus for research in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic and to provide diverse examples of how research and analysis on the political dimensions of the pandemic can contribute to confronting the COVID-19 crisis.

Global justice and the COVID-19 vaccine: Limitations of the public goods framework

Global Public Health
Volume 16, Issue 8-9 (2021)
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rgph20/current

 

Article
Global justice and the COVID-19 vaccine: Limitations of the public goods framework
Nivedita Saksena
Pages: 1512-1521
Published online: 25 Mar 2021
ABSTRACT
As vaccines for COVID-19 were first being approved for use, there were widespread calls for it to be assigned a ‘global public good’. However, allocating the COVID-19 vaccine globally poses a novel challenge of redistribution, one that cannot be effectively undertaken using current mechanisms for the dispensation of aid. An examination of the origins and implicit logic of global public goods theory shows that it would not be effective as a framework in this context. I argue that while it is a useful rhetorical tool to underscore the need for global access, it fails to account for concerns arising out of structural inequities between countries in the Global South and North. In addition to being ill-defined, the phrase encodes a neoliberal logic – one that prioritises the protection of private capital over democratic claims of redistribution and social justice. To ensure global access, our attention must be focussed instead on explicitly accounting for inequities, securing access for countries in the Global South and addressing the norm-setting powers of pharmaceutical companies.

Global infectious disease research collaborations in crises: building capacity and inclusivity through cooperation

Globalization and Health
http://www.globalizationandhealth.com/
[Accessed 7 Aug 2021]

 

Global infectious disease research collaborations in crises: building capacity and inclusivity through cooperation
The initial research requirements in pandemics are predictable. But how is it possible to study a disease that is so quickly spreading and to rapidly use that research to inform control and treatment?
Authors: Jonathon P. Fanning, Srinivas Murthy, Nchafatso G. Obonyo, J. Kenneth Baillie, Steve Webb, Heidi J. Dalton and John F. Fraser
Citation: Globalization and Health 2021 17:84
Content type: Commentary
Published on: 26 July 2021

July 2021 | Borders, Immigrants & Health

Health Affairs
Vol. 40, No. 7 July 2021
https://www.healthaffairs.org/toc/hlthaff/current

 

July 2021 | Borders, Immigrants & Health
About one in seven residents of the US is an immigrant, and about fifteen million people live within 100 kilometers of the US-Mexico border. Disparities in health status exist between people born in the US and those who have immigrated. Immigration policy has been contentious throughout US history, and current policies in the US and Mexico have significant effects on the health and well-being of tens of millions of people. This thematic issue of Health Affairs focuses on immigrants and borders. The overview article by Arturo Vargas Bustamante and coauthors describes a range of health policy issues raised by the continuously shifting demography of US immigrants.

Localisation and local humanitarian action

Humanitarian Exchange Magazine
Number 79, May 2021
https://odihpn.org/magazine/inclusion-of-persons-with-disabilities-in-humanitarian-action-what-now/

 

Localisation and local humanitarian action
by HPN October 2020
The theme of this edition of Humanitarian Exchange is localisation+ and local humanitarian action. Five years ago this week, donors, United Nations (UN) agencies,  non-governmental organisations (NGOs), the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) committed within the Grand Bargain to increase multi-year investments in the institutional capacities of local and national responders, and to provide at least 25% of humanitarian funding to them as directly as possible. Since then, there is increasing consensus at policy and normative level, underscored by the Covid-19 pandemic, that local leadership should be supported.  Localisation has gone from a fringe conversation among policy-makers and aid agencies in 2016 to a formal priority under the Grand Bargain. Wider global movements on anti-racism and decolonisation have also brought new momentum to critical reflections on where power, knowledge and capacity reside in the humanitarian system. Yet progress has been slow and major gaps remain between the rhetoric around humanitarian partnerships, funding and coordination and practices on the ground.

Potential Benefits of Expanded COVID-19 Surveillance in the US

JAMA
August 3, 2021, Vol 326, No. 5, Pages 373-450
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/currentissue

 

Viewpoint
Potential Benefits of Expanded COVID-19 Surveillance in the US
David R. Holtgrave, PhD; Sten H. Vermund, MD, PhD; Leana S. Wen, MD, MSc
free access
JAMA. 2021;326(5):381-382. doi:10.1001/jama.2021.11211
This Viewpoint proposes several important areas of surveillance expansion by US public health agencies and other institutions for COVID-19 testing, vaccination, infection, and mortality rates.

Overview of the Issue

Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved (JHCPU)
Volume 32, Number 2, May 2021 Supplement
https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/44396

 

Table of Contents
Overview of the Issue
Kevin B. Johnson, Tiffani J. Bright, Cheryl R. Clark
…The importance of techquity—defined as the strategic development and deployment of technology in health care and health to advance health equity—was even more apparent after the events of 2020. COVID-19 upended access to care and illuminated the impact of structural racism as a cause for a widening gap of access during the pandemic. Black Lives Matter became more than a trending hashtag on Twitter, or a movement resulting in peaceful protests and calls for policy reform: it put additional focus on the issue of race as a social and not a biological construct and called into question the rationale for common practices in health care that were triggered by race. A notable example was the emerging realization that kidney function assessment was tied to race and hardwired into many of our electronic health records. The real-world evidence around our lack of techquity was incontrovertible.
This Supplemental Issue of JHCPU provides articles that describe challenges to techquity, frameworks to improve the role of technology in care, and examples of how technology can transform health, public health, and health care…

Articles of Significant Interest In This Issue

Journal of Virology
Volume 95 Number 16 July 2021
http://jvi.asm.org/content/current

 

Spotlight
Articles of Significant Interest In This Issue
Poxviruses are exceptional in having a multicomponent entry-fusion complex (EFC) that is comprised of eleven conserved proteins embedded in the membrane of mature virions. Schin et al. (e00852-21) adapted the tripartite split green fluorescent protein complementation system to determine individual EFC protein contacts by proximity analysis within living cells. Previous EFC protein interactions were confirmed and new ones discovered and corroborated by additional methods. Most remarkable was the finding that the small, hydrophobic O3 protein interacted with each of the other EFC proteins, suggesting that multiple copies stabilize the complex within the viral membrane

Measuring routine childhood vaccination coverage in 204 countries and territories, 1980–2019: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2020, Release 1

The Lancet
Aug 07, 2021 Volume 398 Number 10299 p465-558, e9
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/issue/current

 

Articles
Measuring routine childhood vaccination coverage in 204 countries and territories, 1980–2019: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2020, Release 1
GBD 2020, Release 1, Vaccine Coverage Collaborators
Open Access
Summary
Background
Measuring routine childhood vaccination is crucial to inform global vaccine policies and programme implementation, and to track progress towards targets set by the Global Vaccine Action Plan (GVAP) and Immunization Agenda 2030. Robust estimates of routine vaccine coverage are needed to identify past successes and persistent vulnerabilities. Drawing from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2020, Release 1, we did a systematic analysis of global, regional, and national vaccine coverage trends using a statistical framework, by vaccine and over time.
Methods
For this analysis we collated 55 326 country-specific, cohort-specific, year-specific, vaccine-specific, and dose-specific observations of routine childhood vaccination coverage between 1980 and 2019. Using spatiotemporal Gaussian process regression, we produced location-specific and year-specific estimates of 11 routine childhood vaccine coverage indicators for 204 countries and territories from 1980 to 2019, adjusting for biases in country-reported data and reflecting reported stockouts and supply disruptions. We analysed global and regional trends in coverage and numbers of zero-dose children (defined as those who never received a diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis [DTP] vaccine dose), progress towards GVAP targets, and the relationship between vaccine coverage and sociodemographic development.
Findings
By 2019, global coverage of third-dose DTP (DTP3; 81·6% [95% uncertainty interval 80·4–82·7]) more than doubled from levels estimated in 1980 (39·9% [37·5–42·1]), as did global coverage of the first-dose measles-containing vaccine (MCV1; from 38·5% [35·4–41·3] in 1980 to 83·6% [82·3–84·8] in 2019). Third-dose polio vaccine (Pol3) coverage also increased, from 42·6% (41·4–44·1) in 1980 to 79·8% (78·4–81·1) in 2019, and global coverage of newer vaccines increased rapidly between 2000 and 2019. The global number of zero-dose children fell by nearly 75% between 1980 and 2019, from 56·8 million (52·6–60·9) to 14·5 million (13·4–15·9). However, over the past decade, global vaccine coverage broadly plateaued; 94 countries and territories recorded decreasing DTP3 coverage since 2010. Only 11 countries and territories were estimated to have reached the national GVAP target of at least 90% coverage for all assessed vaccines in 2019.
Interpretation
After achieving large gains in childhood vaccine coverage worldwide, in much of the world this progress was stalled or reversed from 2010 to 2019. These findings underscore the importance of revisiting routine immunisation strategies and programmatic approaches, recentring service delivery around equity and underserved populations. Strengthening vaccine data and monitoring systems is crucial to these pursuits, now and through to 2030, to ensure that all children have access to, and can benefit from, lifesaving vaccines.
Funding
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Estimating global and regional disruptions to routine childhood vaccine coverage during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020: a modelling study

The Lancet
Aug 07, 2021 Volume 398 Number 10299 p465-558, e9
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/issue/current

 

Estimating global and regional disruptions to routine childhood vaccine coverage during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020: a modelling study
Kate Causey, et al
Open Access
Summary
Background
The COVID-19 pandemic and efforts to reduce SARS-CoV-2 transmission substantially affected health services worldwide. To better understand the impact of the pandemic on childhood routine immunisation, we estimated disruptions in vaccine coverage associated with the pandemic in 2020, globally and by Global Burden of Disease (GBD) super-region.
Methods
For this analysis we used a two-step hierarchical random spline modelling approach to estimate global and regional disruptions to routine immunisation using administrative data and reports from electronic immunisation systems, with mobility data as a model input. Paired with estimates of vaccine coverage expected in the absence of COVID-19, which were derived from vaccine coverage models from GBD 2020, Release 1 (GBD 2020 R1), we estimated the number of children who missed routinely delivered doses of the third-dose diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP3) vaccine and first-dose measles-containing vaccine (MCV1) in 2020.
Findings
Globally, in 2020, estimated vaccine coverage was 76·7% (95% uncertainty interval 74·3–78·6) for DTP3 and 78·9% (74·8–81·9) for MCV1, representing relative reductions of 7·7% (6·0–10·1) for DTP3 and 7·9% (5·2–11·7) for MCV1, compared to expected doses delivered in the absence of the COVID-19 pandemic. From January to December, 2020, we estimated that 30·0 million (27·6–33·1) children missed doses of DTP3 and 27·2 million (23·4–32·5) children missed MCV1 doses. Compared to expected gaps in coverage for eligible children in 2020, these estimates represented an additional 8·5 million (6·5–11·6) children not routinely vaccinated with DTP3 and an additional 8·9 million (5·7–13·7) children not routinely vaccinated with MCV1 attributable to the COVID-19 pandemic. Globally, monthly disruptions were highest in April, 2020, across all GBD super-regions, with 4·6 million (4·0–5·4) children missing doses of DTP3 and 4·4 million (3·7–5·2) children missing doses of MCV1. Every GBD super-region saw reductions in vaccine coverage in March and April, with the most severe annual impacts in north Africa and the Middle East, south Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean. We estimated the lowest annual reductions in vaccine delivery in sub-Saharan Africa, where disruptions remained minimal throughout the year. For some super-regions, including southeast Asia, east Asia, and Oceania for both DTP3 and MCV1, the high-income super-region for DTP3, and south Asia for MCV1, estimates suggest that monthly doses were delivered at or above expected levels during the second half of 2020.
Interpretation
Routine immunisation services faced stark challenges in 2020, with the COVID-19 pandemic causing the most widespread and largest global disruption in recent history. Although the latest coverage trajectories point towards recovery in some regions, a combination of lagging catch-up immunisation services, continued SARS-CoV-2 transmission, and persistent gaps in vaccine coverage before the pandemic still left millions of children under-vaccinated or unvaccinated against preventable diseases at the end of 2020, and these gaps are likely to extend throughout 2021. Strengthening routine immunisation data systems and efforts to target resources and outreach will be essential to minimise the risk of vaccine-preventable disease outbreaks, reach children who missed routine vaccine doses during the pandemic, and accelerate progress towards higher and more equitable vaccination coverage over the next decade.
Funding
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Patient Portal Reminders for Pediatric Influenza Vaccinations: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Pediatrics
August 01, 2021; Volume 148,Issue 2
https://pediatrics.aappublications.org/

 

Articles
Patient Portal Reminders for Pediatric Influenza Vaccinations: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Carlos Lerner, Christina Albertin, Alejandra Casillas, O. Kenrik Duru, Michael K. Ong, Sitaram Vangala, Sharon Humiston, Sharon Evans, Michael Sloyan, Craig R. Fox, Jonathan E. Bogard, Sarah Friedman, Peter G. Szilagyi
Pediatrics, Aug 2021, 148 (2) e2020048413

Educating the future generation of researchers: A cross-disciplinary survey of trends in analysis methods

PLoS Biology
https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/
(Accessed 7 Aug 2021)

 

Educating the future generation of researchers: A cross-disciplinary survey of trends in analysis methods
Taylor Bolt, Jason S. Nomi, Danilo Bzdok, Lucina Q. Uddin
Meta-Research Article | published 29 Jul 2021 PLOS Biology
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3001313

Levels of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine coverage and indirect protection against invasive pneumococcal disease and pneumonia hospitalisations in Australia: An observational study

PLoS Medicine
http://www.plosmedicine.org/
(Accessed 7 Aug 2021)

 

Levels of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine coverage and indirect protection against invasive pneumococcal disease and pneumonia hospitalisations in Australia: An observational study
Jocelyn Chan, Heather F. Gidding, Christopher C. Blyth, Parveen Fathima, Sanjay Jayasinghe, Peter B. McIntyre, Hannah C. Moore, Kim Mulholland, Cattram D. Nguyen, Ross Andrews, Fiona M. Russell
Research Article | published 03 Aug 2021 PLOS Medicine
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003733

Validation of a redesigned pan-poliovirus assay and real-time PCR platforms for the global poliovirus laboratory network

PLoS One
http://www.plosone.org/
[Accessed 7 Aug 2021]

 

Validation of a redesigned pan-poliovirus assay and real-time PCR platforms for the global poliovirus laboratory network
Hong Sun, Chelsea Harrington, Nancy Gerloff, Mark Mandelbaum, Stacey Jeffries-Miles, Lea Necitas G. Apostol, Ma. Anne-Lesley D. Valencia, Shahzad Shaukat, Mehar Angez, Deepa K. Sharma, Uma P. Nalavade, Shailesh D. Pawar, Elisabeth Pukuta Simbu, Seta Andriamamonjy, Richter Razafindratsimandresy, Everardo Vega
Research Article | published 06 Aug 2021 PLOS ONE
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255795

Rotavirus A infection in pre- and post-vaccine period: Risk factors, genotypes distribution by vaccination status and age of children in Nampula Province, Northern Mozambique (2015-2019)

PLoS One
http://www.plosone.org/
[Accessed 7 Aug 2021]

 

Rotavirus A infection in pre- and post-vaccine period: Risk factors, genotypes distribution by vaccination status and age of children in Nampula Province, Northern Mozambique (2015-2019)
Assucênio Chissaque, Adilson Fernando Loforte Bauhofer, Idalécia Cossa-Moiane, Ezequias Sitoe, Benilde Munlela, Eva Dora João, Jerónimo S. Langa, Jorfélia José Chilaúle, Simone Salvador Boene, Marta Cassocera, Esperança Lourenço Guimarães, Timothy A. Kellogg, Luzia Gonçalves, Nilsa de Deus
Research Article | published 06 Aug 2021 PLOS ONE
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255720

COVID-19 vaccine access and attitudes among people experiencing homelessness from pilot mobile phone survey in Los Angeles, CA

PLoS One
http://www.plosone.org/
[Accessed 7 Aug 2021]

 

COVID-19 vaccine access and attitudes among people experiencing homelessness from pilot mobile phone survey in Los Angeles, CA
Randall Kuhn, Benjamin Henwood, Alexander Lawton, Mary Kleva, Karthik Murali, Coley King, Lillian Gelberg
Research Article | published 30 Jul 2021 PLOS ONE
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255246

Design and proof of concept for targeted phage-based COVID-19 vaccination strategies with a streamlined cold-free supply chain

PNAS – Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
July 27, 2021; vol. 118 no. 30
https://www.pnas.org/content/118/30

 

Microbiology
Design and proof of concept for targeted phage-based COVID-19 vaccination strategies with a streamlined cold-free supply chain
Daniela I. Staquicini, Fenny H. F. Tang, Christopher Markosian, Virginia J. Yao, Fernanda I. Staquicini, Esteban Dodero-Rojas, Vinícius G. Contessoto, Deodate Davis, Paul O’Brien, Nazia Habib, Tracey L. Smith, Natalie Bruiners, Richard L. Sidman, Maria L. Gennaro, Edmund C. Lattime, Steven K. Libutti, Paul C. Whitford, Stephen K. Burley, José N. Onuchic, Wadih Arap, and Renata Pasqualini
PNAS July 27, 2021 118 (30) e2105739118; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2105739118

Taliban’s rise puts polio eradication in danger

Science
06 August 2021 Vol 373, Issue 6555
http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl

 

In Depth
Taliban’s rise puts polio eradication in danger
By Leslie Roberts
Science06 Aug 2021 : 605-606 Restricted Access
U.S. departure from Afghanistan raises questions about future of vaccination drives.
Summary
The U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanistan is imperiling the 3-decade global quest to eradicate polio. The Taliban, which now controls large swaths of the country, has blocked house-to-house polio vaccination in areas under its reign the past 3 years, putting up to 3 million children out of reach of the campaign. The Taliban may well wrest complete control from the Afghan government—which supports the eradication campaign—after U.S. forces are gone. But some inside and outside the Global Polio Eradication Initiative say a clear resolution to the conflict, regardless of who prevails, may actually aid eradication efforts. They hope the campaign will be able to work with the Taliban to keep vaccinations going if it consolidates power.

Evaluation of post-introduction COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness: Summary of interim guidance of the World Health Organization

Vaccine
Volume 39, Issue 30 Pages 4013-4238 (5 July 2021)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/vaccine/vol/39/issue/30

 

Conference info Abstract only
Evaluation of post-introduction COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness: Summary of interim guidance of the World Health Organization
Minal K. Patel, Isabel Bergeri, Joseph S. Bresee, Benjamin J. Cowling, … Daniel R. Feikin
Pages 4013-4024

School-based HPV vaccination positively impacts parents’ attitudes toward adolescent vaccination

Vaccine
Volume 39, Issue 30 Pages 4013-4238 (5 July 2021)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/vaccine/vol/39/issue/30

 

Research article Open access
School-based HPV vaccination positively impacts parents’ attitudes toward adolescent vaccination
Cristyn Davies, Tanya Stoney, Heidi Hutton, Adriana Parrella, … S. Rachel Skinner
Pages 4190-4198

Think Tanks et al

Think Tanks et al
 
 
Brookings [to 7 Aug 2021]
http://www.brookings.edu/
FixGov
Vaccine mandates are more popular than you think
William A. Galston
Thursday, August 5, 2021

Interactive
COVID-19 vaccination efforts in the Middle East and North Africa
Paul Dyer, Isaac Schaider, and Andrew Letzkus
Tuesday, August 3, 2021
 
 
Center for Global Development [to 7 Aug 2021]
http://www.cgdev.org/page/press-center
Publications
Better Together: Exploring the Role of Pooled Procurement in Improving Access to Medicines amid COVID-19
August 2, 2021
Access to safe, effective, and affordable essential medicines is an integral global health goal, and all the more important during a public health emergency like COVID-19. Supply chain inefficiencies, procurement capacity constraints, and financial difficulties impede access to affordable, quality medicines; crises exacerbate these issues.
Julia Kaufman, Morgan Pincombe and Javier Guzman

The US Is Losing the Global War Against COVID-19—And That Is a National Security Issue
July 28, 2021
“The fight against COVID-19 is a global war but policymakers are not behaving accordingly. As a result… the scars will haunt our international relations for years to come.”
Masood Ahmed
 
 
Chatham House [to 7 Aug 2021]
https://www.chathamhouse.org/
Accessed 7 Aug 2021
[No new digest content identified]

 
 
CSIS
https://www.csis.org/
Accessed 7 Aug 2021
Podcast Episode
Chris Murray, IHME: “A Very Awkward Situation”
August 6, 2021 | By J. Stephen Morrison
Chris Murray, director of IHME, joined our podcast once again, at this major moment of reset of expectations – of our ability to control the pandemic, of policy decisions, data gaps, political attitudes and behavior, hitting the wall of hesitancy and refusal to vaccinate, and public confusion. We cover the full gamut: the forecast for the fall surge, missteps on masking, the need for greater transparency in data, and how much room exists to overcome resistance to vaccines.

Transcript
A Conversation with Dr. Anthony Fauci on the Antiviral Program for Pandemics
August 3, 2021

Report
U.S. Emergency Plan for Global Covid-19 Relief: Urgent Action to End the Pandemic Globally and Accelerate U.S. Recovery and Security
August 3, 2021

Podcast Episode
China’s Global Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Conversation with Dr. Yanzhong Huang
August 3, 2021 | By Bonny Lin

 
 

Kaiser Family Foundation
https://www.kff.org/search/?post_type=press-release
August 4, 2021 News Release
Most Unvaccinated Adults Don’t Believe the Vaccines are Very Effective and See the Vaccines as a Greater Health Risk than COVID-19 Itself
Vaccinated Adults Are Nearly Twice as Likely as Unvaccinated Ones to Worry that New Variants Like Delta Will Worsen the Pandemic Nationally and Locally As public health officials struggle to boost vaccination rates nationally, the latest KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor reports that a narrow majority (53%) of unvaccinated adults believe…

August 2, 2021 News Release
Once Common, COVID-19 Deaths in Long-Term Care Were Rare across Most States in June
Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, residents and staff at nursing homes and other long-term care facilities accounted for a huge share of COVID deaths, but a new KFF analysis finds that they were relatively rare events across the country in June. The analysis finds that 13 states and the District…

July 30, 2021 News Release
COVID-19 Vaccine Breakthrough Cases Are Extremely Rare, According to KFF State Data Analysis
As COVID-19 cases increase along with spread of the more transmissible Delta variant, the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines continues to be an important topic. A new KFF analysis looks at COVID-19 vaccine “breakthrough cases,” when fully vaccinated individuals become infected, as well as hospitalizations and deaths, to see which states…

Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review :: 24 July 2021

Vaccines and Global Health: The Week in Review is a weekly digest  summarizing news, events, announcements, peer-reviewed articles and research in the global vaccine ethics and policy space. Content is aggregated from key governmental, NGO, international organization and industry sources, key peer-reviewed journals, and other media channels. This summary proceeds from the broad base of themes and issues monitored by the Center for Vaccine Ethics & Policy in its work: it is not intended to be exhaustive in its coverage. You are viewing the blog version of our weekly digest, typically comprised of between 30 and 40 posts below all dated with the current issue date

.– Request an Email Summary: Vaccines and Global Health : The Week in Review is published as a single email summary, scheduled for release each Saturday evening before midnight (EDT in the U.S.). If you would like to receive the email version, please send your request to david.r.curry@centerforvaccineethicsandpolicy.org.

– pdf version A pdf of the current issue is available here: 

– blog edition: comprised of the approx. 35+ entries posted below.

– Twitter:  Readers can also follow developments on twitter: @vaxethicspolicy.
.
– Links:  We endeavor to test each link as we incorporate it into any post, but recognize that some links may become “stale” as publications and websites reorganize content over time. We apologize in advance for any links that may not be operative. We believe the contextual information in a given post should allow retrieval, but please contact us as above for assistance if necessary.

Support this knowledge-sharing service: Your financial support helps us cover our costs and to address a current shortfall in our annual operating budget. Click here to donate and thank you in advance for your contribution.

.
David R. Curry, MS
Executive Director
Center for Vaccine Ethics and Policy

WHO-WTO High-Level Dialogue on Expanding COVID-19 Vaccine Manufacture to Promote Equitable Access

Milestones :: Perspectives :: Research

 

WHO-WTO High-Level Dialogue on Expanding COVID-19 Vaccine Manufacture to Promote Equitable Access

WHO-WTO dialogue steps up efforts for increased COVID-19 vaccine production and equitable access
21 July 2021
The World Health Organization (WHO) and the WTO on 21 July hosted a High-Level Dialogue on “Expanding COVID-19 vaccine manufacture to promote equitable access”, with the participation of senior policymakers, heads of multilateral agencies, vaccine manufacturers, development finance institutions, global health initiatives and public health activists.

 

The event, which was held under the Chatham House Rule, aimed to identify obstacles and propose solutions for increasing vaccine production and closing the wide gap in vaccination rates between rich and poor countries.

Participants described current and projected production volumes as well as plans for new investments in production capacity. They shared experiences about specific supply chain bottlenecks they were encountering, from export restrictions and raw material shortages to onerous regulatory processes, and exchanged ideas on how these might be addressed.

They discussed issues around the transfer of know-how and technology as well as factors influencing their decisions on licensing intellectual property.

 

While there was broad agreement on the importance of keeping supply chains open and predictable, different perspectives were expressed on the proposed waiver of the WTO’s Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights Agreement provisions pertaining to vaccines and other products needed to combat COVID-19.

The discussions also touched upon a wide range of issues where greater international cooperation would be beneficial. For instance, multiple participants noted that uncoordinated national recognition of WHO-approved vaccines could leave many vaccinated people unable to travel to places where their vaccines are not recognised. In this regard, they urged countries to accept all WHO-approved vaccines…

 

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WHO Director-General’s opening remarks at the WTO – WHO High Level Dialogue: Expanding COVID-19 Vaccine Manufacture To Promote Equitable Access
21 July 2021
My sister Dr Ngozi, dear Mr Tang, Excellencies, members of the private sector, dear colleagues and friends, First of all, I would like to thank you, my sister Ngozi, and your colleagues at WTO for organizing this very important dialogue, and for your strong leadership in addressing the vaccine crisis.

I’m speaking to you from Tokyo, where earlier this morning I had the honour of addressing the International Olympic Committee. I told them that I had come to Tokyo to answer a question that I am often asked: when will the pandemic end? And my answer was simple: it will end when the world chooses to end it, because the solutions are in our hands.

We have all the tools we need: proven public health and social measures; rapid and accurate diagnostics; effective therapeutics including oxygen; and of course, powerful vaccines. And yet as we speak, we are in the early stages of another wave of infections and deaths.

The Delta variant is wreaking havoc around the world. Between now and when we finish our discussion today, more than 1500 people will die from COVID-19. How can this be, 19 months into the pandemic, and 7 months since the first vaccines were approved?

Without doubt, the development, approval and rollout of safe and effective vaccines against COVID-19 less than a year after the first reported cases is a stunning scientific achievement, and a much-needed source of hope for bringing the pandemic under control. And I would like to use this opportunity to thank the leaders of the private sector, the manufacturers who have joined us today. Congratulations for this very historic achievement.

But there remains a shocking imbalance in the global distribution of vaccines. This has created a two-track pandemic: the haves are opening up, while the have-nots are locking down. Over 3.5 billion vaccines have been distributed globally, but more than 75 percent of those have gone to just ten countries. Vaccine inequity is not only a moral failure, it is also epidemiologically and economically self-defeating. Of course, vaccines alone cannot solve the pandemic. Rapid diagnostics and life- saving therapeutics are also vital.

Last month, I had the pleasure of meeting with DG Ngozi, my sister, and DG Tang to commit to working together more closely to tackle the COVID-19 pandemic. We committed to intensified capacity building and providing robust joint technical assistance to countries on COVID-19 health, intellectual property and trade-related matters. Ngozi and I also are working closely together to advocate for immediate, innovative and sustainable solutions to ensure access to COVID-19 vaccines and other technologies.

Our global targets are to vaccinate at least 10% of the population of every country by September, at least 40% by the end of the year, and 70% by mid-next year. These are the critical milestones we must reach together to end the pandemic. To reach those targets, we need 11 billion doses of vaccine. Urgent dose sharing is vital to fill our current supply gap. But dose sharing is a short-term solution.

 

We must spare no effort to increase vaccine supply for lower-income countries. We need to dramatically scale up the number of vaccines being produced. This can be done by removing the barriers to scaling up manufacturing, including through technology transfer, freeing up supply chains, and IP waivers. 

I want to emphasise that WHO values highly the role of the private sector in the pandemic and in every area of health. The intellectual property system plays a vital role in fostering innovation of new tools to save lives. But this pandemic is an unprecedented crisis that demands unprecedented action. With so many lives on the line, profits and patents must come second.

 

Of course, we can’t snatch your property. What we’re proposing is for high-income countries to provide incentives to the private sector because you deserve recognition, and we don’t want you to have financial problems because of IP waiver. WHO and our partners have also established a COVAX manufacturing taskforce, to increase supply in the short term, but also to build a platform for sustainable vaccine manufacturing to support regional health security.

As part of these efforts, this month, WHO and our COVAX partners announced the first COVID mRNA vaccine technology transfer hub, to be set up in South Africa. WHO is also calling for expressions of interest to establish technology transfer hubs to assist countries acquire vaccine technology and know-how as rapidly as possible.

 

We are calling on funders and industry to facilitate voluntary, transparent and non-exclusive licensing of patents, transfer of know-how and data through the COVID-19 Technology Access Pool, or C-TAP.

WHO has prequalified numerous health technologies including vaccines from manufacturers in middle-income countries. These manufacturers have shown that they can produce according to international standards of quality, safety and efficacy. Through C-TAP, we will continue to provide technical assistance to companies to build capacity, especially in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
===
My friends,
There are many diseases for which we lack vaccines, good tests and effective treatments. Not so for COVID-19. We have all the tools we need. That means ending the pandemic is not fundamentally a test of scientific discovery, financial muscle or industrial prowess; it’s a test of character.

Let’s together address the serious challenge of vaccine inequity. Please help us achieve this 70% target of vaccinating the population in all countries. I know we can do it, and I expect a strong support from the private sector to realise the 70% by mid-next year that could help us end the pandemic.
Whatever options we use, the most important is increasing the production capacity significantly so there is enough pie to share, there are enough vaccines to achieve the 70% by mid-next year and open up the world and bring lives and livelihoods to normality…

 

::::::

IFPMA Statement at WTO-WHO High Level Dialogue “Expanding COVID-19 Vaccine Manufacture to Promote Equitable Access”
21 July 2021 – Today, as stated by Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Director General of the World Trade Organization, we are on course to produce 11 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines by the end of this year, which is sufficient to vaccinate the world’s whole adult population. Now, the issue is how these vaccines are going to be distributed more equitably. This is a problem that has to be addressed in the short term by massive dose sharing.

From the first days of the pandemic, the innovative pharma industry knew that developing and manufacturing COVID-19 vaccines would be a colossal task (Ref: 19 March 2020 – Global Biopharmaceutical Industry Commitment to Address Coronavirus Public Health Crisis included the commitment to increase our manufacturing capabilities and share available capacity to ramp up production once a successful vaccine or treatment is developed).

We are on track to make the impossible happen — ramping manufacturing of Covid-19 vaccines up from zero to 11 billion doses. While three or four of the world’s largest vaccine manufacturers tried to develop COVID-19 vaccines and did not (yet) make it, others did, producing hundreds of million of safe and highly effective vaccines thanks to collaborations that were established early on in the pandemic. Therefore, despite the glitches, the bumps and the disappointments common to vaccine development, we are on track to meet the 11 billion doses target this year.

But much more needs to be done about the equitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines. This is why, early this year, we reached out to CEPI, COVAX and other partners to convene a Summit on supply chain and manufacturing (Ref: 9 March 2021 – Meeting discusses COVID-19 vaccine manufacturing bottlenecks that must be urgently tackled for C19 vaccine output to reach its full potential).  All the experts convened at the Summit agreed that the problems in further expanding manufacturing capacity are the bottlenecks in the supply chains, the trade barriers, shortages of raw materials and other ingredients, as well as skilled labor. Pretty much all experts agree that an IP waiver would not tackle any of these challenges.

Let us focus on what really needs to be done. We have outlined five steps to urgently advance COVID-19 vaccine equity, which we launched in May. These steps include: dose sharing, and rich countries are starting to do that; and optimizing production further, which means building on the massive amount of collaboration and technology transfers already underway. (More than 200 collaborations have been forged since April 2020 [ref: Airfinity here] and at the meeting the announcement of another industry collaboration with South Africa was acknowledged.)

When it comes to the future, lessons can be learned from the current pandemic. The first lesson is related to COVAX, which is critical for equitable vaccine distribution.  Sadly, it was a little bit late in securing funding to secure doses. If we want to be better prepared for the next pandemic, we need to look at having better access to funding for such a multilateral effort upfront. The second lesson is that those who delivered safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines were the innovative vaccine manufacturers, collaborating with developing country vaccine manufacturers.  They reached out and signed up with universities, with biotechs and with developing country vaccine manufacturers.

This was not business as usual. Rather than undermining our innovation ecosystem, we need to build on its strengths and acknowledge what allowed us to respond so fast at unprecedented scale.