论文标题
根据2018年CDC指南,黑人和土著社区是否会收到相当多的疫苗
Do Black and Indigenous Communities Receive their Fair Share of Vaccines Under the 2018 CDC Guidelines
论文作者
论文摘要
关于Covid-19疫苗配给指南的辩论的重点是,是否以及如何优先考虑受到大流行特别影响的少数族裔的访问,并且是历史和结构性劣势的主题,尤其是黑人和本地人。我们使用美国社区调查的数据模拟了2018年CDC疫苗分配指南,该数据在不同的疫苗供应中的不同假设下。与所有对总疫苗供应的假设相比,黑人和土著人的疫苗份额比其人口份额更高。但是,根据2018年CDC指南的疫苗份额大大低于其在199号死亡人数和年龄调整后的死亡中所占的份额。然后,我们模拟一种方法,以通过储备系统分配疫苗分配中的劣势。在储备系统中,将单位分为类别,并保留用于类别的单位对该类别的个人提供优惠待遇。使用该地区剥夺指数(ADI)作为劣势的代理,我们表明,40%的高亚型储备会增加分配给黑人或土著人的疫苗的数量,当时大约有7500万辆时,其份额却接近其共同死亡份额。我们的研究结果表明,分配是否公平取决于基准,并强调了考虑实施疫苗分配准则的预期结果的重要性。
A major focus of debate about rationing guidelines for COVID-19 vaccines is whether and how to prioritize access for minority populations that have been particularly affected by the pandemic, and been the subject of historical and structural disadvantage, particularly Black and Indigenous individuals. We simulate the 2018 CDC Vaccine Allocation guidelines using data from the American Community Survey under different assumptions on total vaccine supply. Black and Indigenous individuals combined receive a higher share of vaccines compared to their population share for all assumptions on total vaccine supply. However, their vaccine share under the 2018 CDC guidelines is considerably lower than their share of COVID-19 deaths and age-adjusted deaths. We then simulate one method to incorporate disadvantage in vaccine allocation via a reserve system. In a reserve system, units are placed into categories and units reserved for a category give preferential treatment to individuals from that category. Using the Area Deprivation Index (ADI) as a proxy for disadvantage, we show that a 40% high-ADI reserve increases the number of vaccines allocated to Black or Indigenous individuals, with a share that approaches their COVID-19 death share when there are about 75 million units. Our findings illustrate that whether an allocation is equitable depends crucially on the benchmark and highlight the importance of considering the expected distribution of outcomes from implementing vaccine allocation guidelines.