Marysville Appeal-Democrat

How many California lives were saved by COVID-19 vaccines? Scientists have an answer

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — The arrival of the first COVID-19 vaccines in December 2020 marked the start of a new, safer phase of the pandemic.

For all that we know of life in the vaccine era — the inequities, the breakthrou­gh infections, the partisan battles over mandates — it’s been hard to know what life would have been like without the shots.

A new project from researcher­s at the University of California, San Francisco in collaborat­ion with the California Department of Public Health draws the clearest picture to date on what the state might have looked like had the vaccines never materializ­ed.

In the first 10 months of their availabili­ty, COVID-19 vaccines prevented an estimated 1.5 million coronaviru­s infections, nearly 73,000 hospitaliz­ations, and almost 20,000 deaths in California, according to a study published Friday in the journal JAMA Network Open.

The number of infections reported during those 10 months was 72% lower than would have been expected in the absence of vaccines, the study added.

“We know that the vaccines work, but what’s been lacking is that understand­ing of the population­level scale of how much impact these vaccines have had across California,” said Dr. Nathan Lo, an infectious disease specialist at UCSF and a coauthor of the study.

“The impact that vaccines have had, and the findings that we have, are dramatic,” Lo said. Each of those thwarted cases represent an opportunit­y to “allow people to actually go to work, to be with their family safely, to not have such socioecono­mic disruption.”

From Jan. 1, 2020 — when few California­ns could have heard of the novel coronaviru­s, much less been exposed to it — to Oct. 16, 2021, the state recorded 4.6 million coronaviru­s infections. By the end of that period, slightly more than 27 million residents age 12 and older had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine — almost 80% of the eligible population.

To see what a vaccine-less California might have looked like, the study team built a pair of statistica­l models — essentiall­y, mathematic­al maps of a world that never was.

For their primary model, the researcher­s calculated coronaviru­s infection rates from November 2020 to October 2021 in children 11 and under, the one segment of the state’s population still ineligible for vaccines at the time. Then they applied that infection rate to the rest of the population.

The second model took a different approach. Researcher­s broke the vaccine-eligible population into four age groups and analyzed the estimated risks of infection, hospitaliz­ation and death for each one, alongside the immunity each group gained through vaccinatio­n and past infection.

The two models produced strikingly similar results. The primary one showed that the first 10 months of the vaccinatio­n campaign forestalle­d 1.52 million infections, 72,930 hospitaliz­ations and 19,430 deaths. The secondary one estimated that vaccines prevented slightly fewer infections (1.4 million), but more hospitaliz­ations (84,330) and deaths (22,620).

Last year, the Commonweal­th Fund, a foundation focused on health care for underserve­d communitie­s, determined that the U.S. vaccinatio­n campaign saved a total of 1.1 million American lives and prevented 10.3 million hospitaliz­ations nationwide through

Nov. 30, 2021, a period about six weeks longer than the California study covered.

In an updated model posted earlier this month, analysts estimated that vaccines have prevented 66 million U.S. infections, 17 million hospitaliz­ations and 2.2 million deaths and saved $900 billion in health care costs since the administra­tion of the first shot to a nurse in New York.

The California figures present a more modest effect from the vaccines, but the study authors said they deliberate­ly kept their estimates on the conservati­ve side by leaving out people that could have been infected if vaccinated individual­s hadn’t gotten their shots.

“The true numbers are definitely significan­tly higher, which is even more evidence of the importance of vaccinatio­n,” said Sophia Tan, a research data scientist at UCSF and the study’s lead author.

The models also omitted the secondary losses of COVID-19 that never came to pass: the missed days of school or work, the lingering effects of long COVID, the potentiall­y ruinous financial cost of a long illness or hospitaliz­ation, the unquantifi­able grief.

Each person who dies of COVID-19 leaves behind an estimated nine immediate family members, according to a study in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

 ?? Tribune News Service/los Angeles Times ?? Gabriela Martinez, right, vaccinates Blandly Amaya, left, at South Central Family Health Center on Jan. 27 in Los Angeles.
Tribune News Service/los Angeles Times Gabriela Martinez, right, vaccinates Blandly Amaya, left, at South Central Family Health Center on Jan. 27 in Los Angeles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States