Why Indonesia Prioritizes Vaccination for Young People is Questionable

February 3, 2021 Topic: Coronavirus Region: South Asia Blog Brand: The Reboot Tags: IndonesiaCoronavirusVaccineYoung PeopleWorking Population

Why Indonesia Prioritizes Vaccination for Young People is Questionable

The government argues that vaccinating citizens of productive age, who are more mobile than the elderly, will protect the latter who live in multigenerational households and stay at home. This, according to the government, will provide indirect protection across age groups.

 

The Indonesian government policy to exclude the elderly (aged 60 years and above) in the first phase of the free COVID-19 vaccination program could hinder the vaccine’s impact in lowering mortality rates.

As of 13 January 2021, the government prioritises early-stage vaccination for health workers, civil servants, and citizens aged 18-59 years old. The CoronaVac vaccines from Chinese company Sinovac will not be used to vaccinate elderly citizens aged 60 years old and above.

 

Considering the enormous COVID-19 mortality rates in Indonesia, the highest in Southeast Asia, which are dominated by those in the 60 years and above age bracket (45% of the total confirmed deaths from COVID-19), this policy is problematic.

In addition, this policy is inconsistent with the technical guide regarding vaccine recipient prioritisation issued by the government on 4 January 2021. This guide also incorporates the technical recommendation from the World Health Organization (WHO) to prioritise health workers in the first phase of vaccination, and then civil servants and those aged 60 and above in the second phase (estimated to be January-April 2021).

The government argues that vaccinating citizens of productive age, who are more mobile than the elderly, will protect the latter who live in multigenerational households and stay at home. This, according to the government, will provide indirect protection across age groups.

The government also claimed that there is yet available data on CoronaVac vaccine safety for senior citizens. Furthermore, the National Agency of Drug and Food Control (BPOM) so far has only authorised CoronaVac vaccines for citizens aged 18-59 years old.

We elaborate on why these claims are questionable.

1. Vaccine safety for elderly

In September 2020, Sinovac released the preliminary results of their phase 1 and 2 clinical trials in China for healthy people aged 60 years and above. Currently, the same vaccine is being tested in a phase 3 clinical trial in Bandung, Indonesia.

The preliminary results indicated that the CoronaVac vaccine showed good immunogenicity (ability to trigger immunity) against the virus that causes COVID-19. The vaccine was deemed safe to use for healthy people aged 60 years and above. There were no serious adverse effects related to the vaccine in the clinical trial volunteers.

Turkey, one of Sinovac phase 3 clinical trial sites, granted emergency use authorisation for CoronaVac, targeting health workers and those above 65 years years of age in its early phase of vaccine roll-out. Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, 66 years old, was the first recipient of the CoronaVac vaccine.

Empirical evidence regarding CoronaVac vaccine safety and efficacy from a trial involving elderly in Brazil has also been circulating. Unfortunately, the data (from China and Brazil) were not considered in the evaluation by the National Agency of Drug and Food Control (BPOM) of Indonesia.

2. Vaccine efficacy in preventing virus transmission

Based on clinical trials results of various COVID-19 vaccines that have been released, current vaccines are proven to reduce the risk of symptomatic COVID-19 with varying levels of efficacy.

But, these trials have not answered precisely how efficacious these vaccines are in reducing the risk of transmission or infection.

The phase 3 CoronaVac clinical trial protocol in Brazil, for example, stated that the primary endpoints are: (1) the efficacy in reducing the risk of symptomatic COVID-19 cases; and (2) the safety of the vaccine in adults (aged 18-59 years old) and the elderly (aged 60 years old and above).

Recently, preliminary results from the phase 3 clinical trial in Brazil showed 50.39% efficacy in lowering the incidence rate of symptomatic COVID-19 (with 95% confidence interval: 35.26-61.98%). There is no reliable evidence from the trial on the efficacy against the transmission of the virus.

A more comprehensive evaluation is needed

Data on CoronaVac vaccine safety and efficacy for those aged 60 years and above are available to be further evaluated by BPOM.

Kusnandi Rusmil, the principal investigator of the CoronaVac Vaccine Clinical Trial Research Team in Indonesia, stated that data regarding vaccine safety on the elderly can be obtained from clinical trials in other countries.

BPOM has the right and obligation to request those data for further assessment so that recommendations for CoronaVac vaccine use in Indonesia can potentially be extended to elderly population immediately.

BPOM should immediately consider preliminary clinical trial results from every location testing the CoronaVac vaccine in a more comprehensive and detailed manner. These data can provide some evidence regarding vaccine efficacy and safety in the elderly. The differences between sample size and characteristics in every clinical trial location might affect efficacy and safety results and should be evaluated proportionally, based on the overall clinical trial data across locations.

Amidst the high mortality rate in the elderly group due to COVID-19, overwhelmed health care facilities in various cities, and limited vaccines availability, the government should prioritise elderly in the first phase of the vaccination roll-out.

By prioritising vaccination for elderly, Indonesia may optimally reduce the hospital burden and COVID-19 deaths amidst a limited vaccine supply during the first vaccination phase.

Authors are members of the Health Unit, Indonesia Student Association in the United Kingdom (PPI UK). Nursidah Abdullah, an MSc Public Health and Health Promotion student at Swansea University also contributed to the article.

The Conversation

Bimandra Djaafara, PhD student in infectious disease epidemiology, Imperial College London; Fahrin Ramadan Andiwijaya, Research Assistant at Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Mataram. MSc Public Health Student, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; Fiona Verisqa, PhD candidate in Biomaterials and Tissue Engineering, UCL; Ihsan Fadilah, NIHR Fellow, Department of Biostatistics and Health Informatics, King's College London; Kartika Saraswati, DPhil student in Clinical Medicine, University of Oxford, and Rizka Maulida, PhD Student, Centre for Diet and Activity Research (CEDAR) MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.