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Is Mandatory Vaccination in Population over 60 Adequate to Control the COVID-19 Pandemic in E.U.?
Authors
N.P. Rachaniotis Dasaklis, T.K. Fotopoulos, F. Chouzouris, M. Sypsa, V. Lyberaki, A. Tinios, P.
Publication date
1 January 2022
Publisher
Abstract
Vaccine hesitancy, which potentially leads to the refusal or delayed acceptance of COVID-19 vaccines, is considered a key driver of the increasing death toll from the pandemic in the EU. The European Commission and several member states’ governments are either planning or have already directly or indirectly announced mandatory vaccination for individuals aged over 60, the group which has repeatedly proved to be the most vulnerable. In this paper, an assessment of this strategy’s benefits is attempted by deriving a metric for the potential gains of vaccination mandates that can be used to compare EU member states. This is completed by examining the reduction in Standard Expected Years of Life Lost (SEYLL) per person for the EU population over 60 as a function of the member states’ vaccination percentage in these ages. The publicly available data and results of the second iteration of the SHARE COVID-19 survey on the acceptance of COVID-19 vaccines, conducted during the summer of 2021, are used as inputs. © 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland
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Pergamos : Unified Institutional Repository / Digital Library Platform of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
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Last time updated on 10/02/2023