This article investigates the relationship between school openings and Covid-19 diffusion when school-age vaccination becomes available. The analysis relies on a unique geo-referenced high frequency database on age of vaccination, Covid-19 cases and hospitalization indicators from the Italian region of Sicily. The study focuses on the change of Covid-19 diffusion after school opening in a homogeneous geographical territory (i.e., with the same control measures and surveillance systems, centrally coordinated by the Regional Government). The identification of causal effects derives from a comparison of the change in cases before and after school opening in the school year 2020/21, when vaccination was not available, and in 2021/22, when the vaccination campaign targeted individuals of age 12-19 and above 19. Results indicate that, while school opening determined an increase in the growth rate of Covid-19 cases in 2020/2021, this effect has been substantially reduced by school-age vaccination in 2021/2022. In particular, we find that an increase of approximately 10% in the vaccination rate of school-age population reduces the growth rate of Covid-19 cases after school opening by approximately 1%.

Amodio, E., Battisti, M., Gravina, A.F., Lavezzi, A.M., Maggio, G. (2023). School-age vaccination, school openings and Covid-19 diffusion. HEALTH ECONOMICS, 32(5), 1084-1100 [10.1002/hec.4657].

School-age vaccination, school openings and Covid-19 diffusion

Amodio, Emanuele;Battisti, Michele;Gravina, Antonio Francesco;Lavezzi, Andrea Mario;Maggio, Giuseppe
2023-02-08

Abstract

This article investigates the relationship between school openings and Covid-19 diffusion when school-age vaccination becomes available. The analysis relies on a unique geo-referenced high frequency database on age of vaccination, Covid-19 cases and hospitalization indicators from the Italian region of Sicily. The study focuses on the change of Covid-19 diffusion after school opening in a homogeneous geographical territory (i.e., with the same control measures and surveillance systems, centrally coordinated by the Regional Government). The identification of causal effects derives from a comparison of the change in cases before and after school opening in the school year 2020/21, when vaccination was not available, and in 2021/22, when the vaccination campaign targeted individuals of age 12-19 and above 19. Results indicate that, while school opening determined an increase in the growth rate of Covid-19 cases in 2020/2021, this effect has been substantially reduced by school-age vaccination in 2021/2022. In particular, we find that an increase of approximately 10% in the vaccination rate of school-age population reduces the growth rate of Covid-19 cases after school opening by approximately 1%.
8-feb-2023
Amodio, E., Battisti, M., Gravina, A.F., Lavezzi, A.M., Maggio, G. (2023). School-age vaccination, school openings and Covid-19 diffusion. HEALTH ECONOMICS, 32(5), 1084-1100 [10.1002/hec.4657].
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Health Economics - 2023 - Amodio - School‐age vaccination school openings and Covid‐19 diffusion.pdf

accesso aperto

Descrizione: Manuscript
Tipologia: Versione Editoriale
Dimensione 1.88 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
1.88 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10447/585650
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 1
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 1
social impact