Flu-Fighting Strategies Should be Tailored to Cities and Rural Areas, Study Says

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In the face of a flu epidemic, a one-size fits all vaccine strategy won't be effective, a York University study has found. Instead, strategies need to change significantly depending on the characteristics of each region in Canada and how easily the particular flu strain spreads.

"The window of time around the onset of the epidemic is going to be vastly different between a remote population and an urban one, and this is something public health needs to pay attention to when developing vaccine strategies," says York University researcher and study lead Seyed Moghadas. "Different populations require different vaccination policies to minimize the impact of the disease."

The study, published today in the journal Scientific Reports by Nature, looked at which strategies produce the lowest number of infections and lead to the least number of hospitalizations.

"Studies such as this, that combine big data and computer simulations, have the potential to inform evidence-based decision-making in public health," says Marek Laskowski, a York University researcher involved in the study.

The research found that the different age demographics of remote and urban populations have a significant impact on the outcome of vaccinations. Many remote areas of the country have a higher percentage of children, who are key transmitters of the virus, compared with urban centres, which generally have fewer children, but more young and middle-aged adults.

The research looked at how the different areas responded when the flu vaccine was given in either a single dose or two doses before, during and after the start of the epidemic.

The study found that for most strategies the attack rates of the virus in the urban population was lowest for children under five, but in the remote population, adults older than 50 had the lowest attack rates. But those attack rates varied depending on when and how the vaccinations were given.

There is a window of time before and after the onset of an epidemic when the choice of vaccination strategy could significantly affect the outcome, says Moghadas. Demographic variables could play an important role in determining which strategy to use.

"In all strategies for a highly transmissible virus, delivering the vaccine after the start of the epidemic had no or minimal effect," he says. Even with the usual seasonal flu virus, if the vaccine was given after the virus has started to spread, it has little effect on who and how many people get sick.

Early vaccination leads to the best outcomes from both a public health and socioeconomic perspective, he said. It reduces the rates of infection, hospitalization and death, along with stress on the healthcare system.

The research is significant especially in light of new technologies that promise quicker production of flu vaccines, unlike the current egg-based technology which takes four to six months.

"In the case of epidemic emergencies, that's actually a very long process. A time line of six months for vaccine production means it is basically the end of the epidemic by the time we get the vaccine," says Moghadas.

As new technology allows for faster vaccines, strategies to distribute them quickly need to be in place and those strategies will depend on the makeup of each region.

Source: York University
 

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