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Ascertainment of vaccination status by self‐report versus source documentation: Impact on measuring COVID‐19 vaccine effectiveness
- Stephenson, Meagan;
- Olson, Samantha M;
- Self, Wesley H;
- Ginde, Adit A;
- Mohr, Nicholas M;
- Gaglani, Manjusha;
- Shapiro, Nathan I;
- Gibbs, Kevin W;
- Hager, David N;
- Prekker, Matthew E;
- Gong, Michelle N;
- Steingrub, Jay S;
- Peltan, Ithan D;
- Martin, Emily T;
- Reddy, Raju;
- Busse, Laurence W;
- Duggal, Abhijit;
- Wilson, Jennifer G;
- Qadir, Nida;
- Mallow, Christopher;
- Kwon, Jennie H;
- Exline, Matthew C;
- Chappell, James D;
- Lauring, Adam S;
- Baughman, Adrienne;
- Lindsell, Christopher J;
- Hart, Kimberly W;
- Lewis, Nathaniel M;
- Patel, Manish M;
- Tenforde, Mark W;
- Investigators, IVY Network
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1111/irv.13023Abstract
Background
During the COVID-19 pandemic, self-reported COVID-19 vaccination might facilitate rapid evaluations of vaccine effectiveness (VE) when source documentation (e.g., immunization information systems [IIS]) is not readily available. We evaluated the concordance of COVID-19 vaccination status ascertained by self-report versus source documentation and its impact on VE estimates.Methods
Hospitalized adults (≥18 years) admitted to 18 U.S. medical centers March-June 2021 were enrolled, including COVID-19 cases and SARS-CoV-2 negative controls. Patients were interviewed about COVID-19 vaccination. Abstractors simultaneously searched IIS, medical records, and other sources for vaccination information. To compare vaccination status by self-report and documentation, we estimated percent agreement and unweighted kappa with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). We then calculated VE in preventing COVID-19 hospitalization of full vaccination (2 doses of mRNA product ≥14 days prior to illness onset) independently using data from self-report or source documentation.Results
Of 2520 patients, 594 (24%) did not have self-reported vaccination information to assign vaccination group; these patients tended to be more severely ill. Among 1924 patients with both self-report and source documentation information, 95.0% (95% CI: 93.9-95.9%) agreement was observed, with a kappa of 0.9127 (95% CI: 0.9109-0.9145). VE was 86% (95% CI: 81-90%) by self-report data only and 85% (95% CI: 81-89%) by source documentation data only.Conclusions
Approximately one-quarter of hospitalized patients could not provide self-report COVID-19 vaccination status. Among patients with self-report information, there was high concordance with source documented status. Self-report may be a reasonable source of COVID-19 vaccination information for timely VE assessment for public health action.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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