Original Article

Inequality in COVID-19 vaccination in Africa

Saad Zbiri, Chakib Boukhalfa
Journal of Public Health in Africa | Vol 14, No 7 | a156 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4081/jphia.2023.2353 | © 2024 Saad Zbiri, Chakib Boukhalfa | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 04 April 2024 | Published: 26 July 2023

About the author(s)

Saad Zbiri, International School of Public Health, Mohammed VI University of Sciences and Health, Casablanca; Laboratory of Public Health, Health Economics and Health Management, Mohammed VI Center for Research and Innovation, Rabat, Morocco
Chakib Boukhalfa, National School of Public Health, Rabat, Morocco

Abstract

Background. The COVID-19 pandemic has spread rapidly to all countries with significant health, socioeconomic, and political consequences. Several safe and effective vaccines have been developed. However, it is not certain that all African countries have successfully vaccinated their populations.

Objective. To study the distribution and determinants of COVID-19 vaccination in Africa from March 2021 to June 2022.

Methods. Using reliable open-access data, we used the proportion of fully vaccinated people with a complete schedule as a reference variable. To analyze the level of inequality in COVID-19 vaccination, we computed common inequality indicators including two percentile ratios, the Generalized Entropy index, the Gini coefficient, and the Atkinson index. We also estimated the Lorenz curve. To identify drivers of COVID-19 vaccination, we estimated univariate and multivariate regression models as a function of COVID-19-related variables, demographic, epidemiologic, socioeconomic, and health system-related variables. To overcome a potential endogeneity bias, we checked our results using simultaneous equation models.

Results. 53 African countries with available data were included in the study. The proportion of fully vaccinated people increased during the study period. However, this increase remained unequal across African countries. Based on the inequality indicators and the Lorenz curve, inequalities in COVID-19 vaccination across African countries were high, although they have decreased in recent months. Total COVID-19 cases and human development index were identified as significant determinant factors that were independently associated with COVID-19 vaccination.

Conclusions. Inequality in COVID-19 vaccination in Africa was high. Promoting adequate information to the general population and providing financial and logistical support to low-income countries can help expand COVID-19 vaccination in Africa.


Keywords

COVID-19; vaccination; vaccine; inequality; Africa

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Crossref Citations

1. Vaccine inequity: a threat to Africa’s recovery from COVID-19
Calvin R. Wei, Samuel Kamande, Godwin C. Lang’at
Tropical Medicine and Health  vol: 51  issue: 1  year: 2023  
doi: 10.1186/s41182-023-00564-2