Vaccine equity in COVID-19: a meta-narrative review

被引:7
作者
Borowicz, Julia [1 ]
Zhang, Zheting [2 ]
Day, Giskin [1 ,3 ]
da Costa, Mariana Pinto [4 ,5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Imperial Coll London, Fac Med, London, England
[2] Lee Kong Chian Sch Med, Singapore, Singapore
[3] Kings Coll London, Florence Nightingale Fac Nursing Midwifery & Palli, London, England
[4] Kings Coll London, Inst Psychiat Psychol & Neurosci, London, England
[5] Univ Porto, Inst Biomed Sci Abel Salazar, Porto, Portugal
[6] Univ Porto, Inst Publ Hlth, Porto, Portugal
来源
BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH | 2022年 / 7卷 / 12期
关键词
COVID-19; Vaccines; Public Health; Health policy; GLOBAL VACCINE; DIFFUSION; ACCESS; HEALTH;
D O I
10.1136/bmjgh-2022-009876
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
The topic of inequitable vaccine distribution has been widely discussed by academics, journalists and policy-makers in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, research into perceptions of vaccine equity has been particularly neglected, resulting in a lack of universal understanding of vaccine equity. To address this, we conducted a meta-narrative review on COVID-19 vaccine equity according to the Realist And MEta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards (RAMESES) publication standard. The review included articles published between January 2020 and September 2021. It aims to (1) identify research traditions that have considered this topic and investigate how it has been conceptualised; (2) explore any potential differences in understandings of the concept of vaccine equity adopted by distinct research groups; and (3) investigate the angles from which authors based their recommendations on how vaccine equity can be achieved. Five meta-narratives from the literature across various research traditions are identified, contextualised and discussed: frameworks and mechanisms for vaccine allocation, global health law, vaccine nationalism, ethics and morality, and reparative justice. Our findings indicate the need for a comparative review of existing global COVID-19 allocation frameworks, with a focus on explicating understandings of vaccine equity. COVID-19 will not be the last health crisis the world confronts. Heterogeneity in the academic literature is part of the way concepts are debated and legitimised, but in the interests of global public health policy-making, it is desirable to reach a consensus on what constitutes progress on equitable development, production, distribution and research.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 67 条
  • [1] Adejumo Oludamilola Adebola, 2021, Pan Afr Med J, V39, P197, DOI 10.11604/pamj.2021.39.197.29041
  • [2] [Anonymous], 1946, Am J Public Health Nations Health, V36, P1315
  • [3] Structured inequalities and authors' positionalities in academic publishing: The case of Philippine international migration scholarship
    Arnado, Janet M.
    [J]. CURRENT SOCIOLOGY, 2023, 71 (03) : 356 - 378
  • [4] Assembly U.G., 1948, UN GEN ASSEMBLY, V302
  • [5] Global COVID-19 vaccine inequity: The scope, the impact, and the challenges
    Asundi, Archana
    O'Leary, Colin
    Bhadelia, Nahid
    [J]. CELL HOST & MICROBE, 2021, 29 (07) : 1036 - 1039
  • [6] Human rights and fair access to COVID-19 vaccines: the International AIDS Society-Lancet Commission on Health and Human Rights
    Beyrer, Chris
    Allotey, Pascale
    Amon, Joseph J.
    Baral, Stefan D.
    Bassett, Mary T.
    Deacon, Harriet
    Dean, Lorraine T.
    Fan, Lilianne
    Giacaman, Rita
    Gomes, Carolyn
    Gruskin, Sofia
    Jabbour, Samer
    Kazatchkine, Michel
    Stackpool-Moore, Lucy
    Maleche, Allan
    McKee, Martin
    Mon, Sandra Hsu Hnin
    Paiva, Vera
    Peryskina, Alena
    Puras, Dainius
    Rubenstein, Leonard
    Kamarulzaman, Adeeba
    [J]. LANCET, 2021, 397 (10284) : 1524 - 1527
  • [7] Equitable and Effective Distribution of the COVID-19 Vaccines - A Scientific and Moral Obligation
    Binagwaho, Agnes
    Mathewos, Kedest
    Davis, Sheila
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH POLICY AND MANAGEMENT, 2022, 11 (02) : 100 - 102
  • [8] COVID-19 Pandemic and Equal Access to Vaccines
    Bolcato, Matteo
    Rodriguez, Daniele
    Feola, Alessandro
    Di Mizio, Giulio
    Bonsignore, Alessandro
    Ciliberti, Rosagemma
    Tettamanti, Camilla
    Trabucco Aurilio, Marco
    Aprile, Anna
    [J]. VACCINES, 2021, 9 (06)
  • [9] The Equitable Distribution of COVID-19 Therapeutics and Vaccines
    Bollyky, Thomas J.
    Gostin, Lawrence O.
    Hamburg, Margaret A.
    [J]. JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2020, 323 (24): : 2462 - 2463
  • [10] The first 12 months of COVID-19: a timeline of immunological insights
    Carvalho, Thiago
    Krammer, Florian
    Iwasaki, Akiko
    [J]. NATURE REVIEWS IMMUNOLOGY, 2021, 21 (04) : 245 - 256