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Review
. 2020 Jul 14:11:1526.
doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.01526. eCollection 2020.

Impact of Vaccines; Health, Economic and Social Perspectives

Affiliations
Review

Impact of Vaccines; Health, Economic and Social Perspectives

Charlene M C Rodrigues et al. Front Microbiol. .

Abstract

In the 20th century, the development, licensing and implementation of vaccines as part of large, systematic immunization programs started to address health inequities that existed globally. However, at the time of writing, access to vaccines that prevent life-threatening infectious diseases remains unequal to all infants, children and adults in the world. This is a problem that many individuals and agencies are working hard to address globally. As clinicians and biomedical scientists we often focus on the health benefits that vaccines provide, in the prevention of ill-health and death from infectious pathogens. Here we discuss the health, economic and social benefits of vaccines that have been identified and studied in recent years, impacting all regions and all age groups. After learning of the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 virus in December 2019, and its potential for global dissemination to cause COVID-19 disease was realized, there was an urgent need to develop vaccines at an unprecedented rate and scale. As we appreciate and quantify the health, economic and social benefits of vaccines and immunization programs to individuals and society, we should endeavor to communicate this to the public and policy makers, for the benefit of endemic, epidemic, and pandemic diseases.

Keywords: children; health economics; immunization; infection; infectious diseases; vaccines.

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Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
The impact of vaccines according to their health, economic or social benefit.
FIGURE 2
FIGURE 2
Vaccine uptake across different regions defined by economic status by the World Bank into high- (solid line), middle- (dashed line), and low-income countries (dotted line) for the past 20 years. Data from the World Health Organization and UNICEF dataset “Coverage Estimates Series” (World Health Organization [WHO] and United Nations Children’s Fund [UNICEF], 2019).
FIGURE 3
FIGURE 3
Reduction in infectious diseases globally. Across all world regions, data from the WHO, for the last 20 years showing the control of diphtheria and tetanus and the decline in rubella and congenital rubella syndrome (data not shown). Data from the World Health Organization dataset “Reported cases of vaccine-preventable diseases” (World Health Organisation, 2019c).

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