Publications

Export 4 results:
Sort by: Author [ Title  (Asc)] Type Year
A B C D E F G H I J K [L] M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z   [Show ALL]
H
Gomes, Gabriela M. M., Ricardo Aguas, Joao S. Lopes, Marta C. Nunes, Carlota Rebelo, Paula Rodrigues, and Claudio J. Struchiner. "How host heterogeneity governs tuberculosis reinfection?" PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES. 279 (2012): 2473-2478. Abstract

n/a

I
Pinho, S. T. R., P. Rodrigues, R. F. S. Andrade, H. Serra, J. S. Lopes, and M. G. M. Gomes. "Impact of tuberculosis treatment length and adherence under different transmission intensities." THEORETICAL POPULATION BIOLOGY. 104 (2015): 68-77. Abstract

n/a

Lopes, Joao Sollari, Paula Rodrigues, Suani T. R. Pinho, Roberto F. S. Andrade, Raquel Duarte, and Gabriela M. M. Gomes. "Interpreting measures of tuberculosis transmission: a case study on the Portuguese population." BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES. 14 (2014). Abstract

n/a

M
Caetano, Constantino, Maria Luísa Morgado, Paula Patrício, Andreia Leite, Ausenda Machado, André Torres, João Freitas Pereira, Sónia Namorado, Ana Sottomayor, André Peralta-Santos, and Baltazar Nunes. "Measuring the impact of COVID-19 vaccination and immunity waning: a modelling study for Portugal." Vaccine (2022). AbstractWebsite

Vaccination strategies to control COVID-19 have been ongoing worldwide since the end of 2020. Understanding their possible effect is key to prevent future disease spread. Using a modelling approach, this study intends to measure the impact of the COVID-19 Portuguese vaccination strategy on the effective reproduction number and explore three scenarios for vaccine effectiveness waning. Namely, the no-immunity-loss, 1-year and 3-years of immunity duration scenarios. We adapted an age-structured SEIR deterministic model and used Portuguese hospitalisation data for the model calibration. Results show that, although the Portuguese vaccination plan had a substantial impact in reducing overall transmission, it might not be sufficient to control disease spread. A significant vaccination coverage of those above 5 years old, a vaccine effectiveness against disease of at least 80% and softer non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs), such as mask usage and social distancing, would be necessary to control disease spread in the worst scenario considered. The immunity duration scenario of 1-year displays a resurgence of COVID-19 hospitalisations by the end of 2021, the same is observed in 3-year scenario although with a lower magnitude. The no-immunity-loss scenario presents a low increase in hospitalisations. In both the 1-year and 3-year scenarios, a vaccination boost of those above 65 years old would result in a 53% and 38% peak reduction of non-ICU hospitalisations, respectively. These results suggest that NPIs should not be fully phased-out but instead be combined with a fast booster vaccination strategy to reduce healthcare burden.