Cargando…

SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Coverage and Key Public Health Indicators May Explain Disparities in COVID-19 Country-Specific Case Fatality Rate Within European Economic Area

Aim To investigate the reasons for disparity regarding the country-specific COVID-19-related case fatality rate (CFR) within the 30 countries of the European Economic Area (EEA). Materials and methods Data regarding population, area, COVID-19-associated infections/deaths, vaccination, life expectanc...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Papadopoulos, Vasileios P, Emmanouilidou, Anatoli, Yerou, Marios, Panagaris, Stefanos, Souleiman, Chousein, Varela, Despoina, Avramidou, Peny, Melissopoulou, Evangelia, Pappas, Chrysostomos, Iliadou, Zoi, Piperopoulos, Ilias, Somadis, Vasileios, Partsalidis, Anestis, Metaxa, Eleni, Feresiadis, Ioannis, Filippou, Dimitrios
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8994019/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35415037
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.22989
_version_ 1784684020986019840
author Papadopoulos, Vasileios P
Emmanouilidou, Anatoli
Yerou, Marios
Panagaris, Stefanos
Souleiman, Chousein
Varela, Despoina
Avramidou, Peny
Melissopoulou, Evangelia
Pappas, Chrysostomos
Iliadou, Zoi
Piperopoulos, Ilias
Somadis, Vasileios
Partsalidis, Anestis
Metaxa, Eleni
Feresiadis, Ioannis
Filippou, Dimitrios
author_facet Papadopoulos, Vasileios P
Emmanouilidou, Anatoli
Yerou, Marios
Panagaris, Stefanos
Souleiman, Chousein
Varela, Despoina
Avramidou, Peny
Melissopoulou, Evangelia
Pappas, Chrysostomos
Iliadou, Zoi
Piperopoulos, Ilias
Somadis, Vasileios
Partsalidis, Anestis
Metaxa, Eleni
Feresiadis, Ioannis
Filippou, Dimitrios
author_sort Papadopoulos, Vasileios P
collection PubMed
description Aim To investigate the reasons for disparity regarding the country-specific COVID-19-related case fatality rate (CFR) within the 30 countries of the European Economic Area (EEA). Materials and methods Data regarding population, area, COVID-19-associated infections/deaths, vaccination, life expectancy, elderly population, infant mortality, gender disparity, urbanization, gross domestic product (GDP), income per capita, health spending per capita, physicians, nursing personnel, hospital beds, ICU beds, hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and smoking from all EEA countries were collected from official sources on January 16, 2022. Correlation coefficients were computed, and optimal scaling using ridge regression was used to reach the most parsimonious multivariate model assessing any potential independent correlation of public health parameters with COVID-19 CFR. Results COVID-19 CFR ranges from 0.1% (Iceland) to 4.0% (Bulgaria). All parameters but population density, GDP, total health spending (% of GDP), ICU beds, diabetes, and obesity were correlated with COVID-19 CFR. In the most parsimonious multivariate model, elderly population rate (P = 0.018), males/total ratio (P = 0.013), nurses/hospital beds (P = 0.001), physicians/hospital beds (P = 0.026), public health spending (P = 0.013), smoking rate (P = 0.013), and unvaccinated population rate (P = 0.00005) were demonstrated to present independent correlation with COVID-19 CFR. In detail, the COVID-19 CFR is estimated to increase by 1.24 times in countries with vaccination rate of <0.34, 1.11 times in countries with an elderly population rate of ≥0.20, 1.14 times in countries with male ratio values ≥0.493, 1.12 times in countries spending <2,000$ annually per capita for public health, 1.14 and 1.10 times in countries with <2.30 nurses and <0.88 physicians per hospital bed, respectively, and 1.12 in countries with smoking ratio ≥0.22, while holding all other independent variables of the model constant. Conclusion COVID-19 CFR varies substantially among EEA countries and is independently linked with low vaccination rates, increased elderly population rate, diminished public health spending per capita, insufficient physicians and nursing personnel per hospital bed, and prevalent smoking habits. Therefore, public health authorities are awaited to consider these parameters in prioritizing actions to manage the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8994019
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Cureus
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-89940192022-04-11 SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Coverage and Key Public Health Indicators May Explain Disparities in COVID-19 Country-Specific Case Fatality Rate Within European Economic Area Papadopoulos, Vasileios P Emmanouilidou, Anatoli Yerou, Marios Panagaris, Stefanos Souleiman, Chousein Varela, Despoina Avramidou, Peny Melissopoulou, Evangelia Pappas, Chrysostomos Iliadou, Zoi Piperopoulos, Ilias Somadis, Vasileios Partsalidis, Anestis Metaxa, Eleni Feresiadis, Ioannis Filippou, Dimitrios Cureus Infectious Disease Aim To investigate the reasons for disparity regarding the country-specific COVID-19-related case fatality rate (CFR) within the 30 countries of the European Economic Area (EEA). Materials and methods Data regarding population, area, COVID-19-associated infections/deaths, vaccination, life expectancy, elderly population, infant mortality, gender disparity, urbanization, gross domestic product (GDP), income per capita, health spending per capita, physicians, nursing personnel, hospital beds, ICU beds, hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and smoking from all EEA countries were collected from official sources on January 16, 2022. Correlation coefficients were computed, and optimal scaling using ridge regression was used to reach the most parsimonious multivariate model assessing any potential independent correlation of public health parameters with COVID-19 CFR. Results COVID-19 CFR ranges from 0.1% (Iceland) to 4.0% (Bulgaria). All parameters but population density, GDP, total health spending (% of GDP), ICU beds, diabetes, and obesity were correlated with COVID-19 CFR. In the most parsimonious multivariate model, elderly population rate (P = 0.018), males/total ratio (P = 0.013), nurses/hospital beds (P = 0.001), physicians/hospital beds (P = 0.026), public health spending (P = 0.013), smoking rate (P = 0.013), and unvaccinated population rate (P = 0.00005) were demonstrated to present independent correlation with COVID-19 CFR. In detail, the COVID-19 CFR is estimated to increase by 1.24 times in countries with vaccination rate of <0.34, 1.11 times in countries with an elderly population rate of ≥0.20, 1.14 times in countries with male ratio values ≥0.493, 1.12 times in countries spending <2,000$ annually per capita for public health, 1.14 and 1.10 times in countries with <2.30 nurses and <0.88 physicians per hospital bed, respectively, and 1.12 in countries with smoking ratio ≥0.22, while holding all other independent variables of the model constant. Conclusion COVID-19 CFR varies substantially among EEA countries and is independently linked with low vaccination rates, increased elderly population rate, diminished public health spending per capita, insufficient physicians and nursing personnel per hospital bed, and prevalent smoking habits. Therefore, public health authorities are awaited to consider these parameters in prioritizing actions to manage the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Cureus 2022-03-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8994019/ /pubmed/35415037 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.22989 Text en Copyright © 2022, Papadopoulos et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Infectious Disease
Papadopoulos, Vasileios P
Emmanouilidou, Anatoli
Yerou, Marios
Panagaris, Stefanos
Souleiman, Chousein
Varela, Despoina
Avramidou, Peny
Melissopoulou, Evangelia
Pappas, Chrysostomos
Iliadou, Zoi
Piperopoulos, Ilias
Somadis, Vasileios
Partsalidis, Anestis
Metaxa, Eleni
Feresiadis, Ioannis
Filippou, Dimitrios
SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Coverage and Key Public Health Indicators May Explain Disparities in COVID-19 Country-Specific Case Fatality Rate Within European Economic Area
title SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Coverage and Key Public Health Indicators May Explain Disparities in COVID-19 Country-Specific Case Fatality Rate Within European Economic Area
title_full SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Coverage and Key Public Health Indicators May Explain Disparities in COVID-19 Country-Specific Case Fatality Rate Within European Economic Area
title_fullStr SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Coverage and Key Public Health Indicators May Explain Disparities in COVID-19 Country-Specific Case Fatality Rate Within European Economic Area
title_full_unstemmed SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Coverage and Key Public Health Indicators May Explain Disparities in COVID-19 Country-Specific Case Fatality Rate Within European Economic Area
title_short SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Coverage and Key Public Health Indicators May Explain Disparities in COVID-19 Country-Specific Case Fatality Rate Within European Economic Area
title_sort sars-cov-2 vaccination coverage and key public health indicators may explain disparities in covid-19 country-specific case fatality rate within european economic area
topic Infectious Disease
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8994019/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35415037
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.22989
work_keys_str_mv AT papadopoulosvasileiosp sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT emmanouilidouanatoli sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT yeroumarios sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT panagarisstefanos sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT souleimanchousein sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT vareladespoina sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT avramidoupeny sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT melissopoulouevangelia sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT pappaschrysostomos sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT iliadouzoi sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT piperopoulosilias sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT somadisvasileios sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT partsalidisanestis sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT metaxaeleni sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT feresiadisioannis sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea
AT filippoudimitrios sarscov2vaccinationcoverageandkeypublichealthindicatorsmayexplaindisparitiesincovid19countryspecificcasefatalityratewithineuropeaneconomicarea