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Bmc Public Health

Publication date: 2023-11-17
Volume: 23
Publisher: Springer Nature

Author:

Natalia, Yessika Adelwin
Delporte, Margaux ; De Witte, Dries ; Beutels, Philippe ; Dewatripont, Mathias ; Molenberghs, Geert

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Public, Environmental & Occupational Health, COVID-19, Intention, Pass, Scoping review, Transmission, Uptake, Vaccine, DETERMINANTS, Humans, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 Vaccines, Vaccination, 1117 Public Health and Health Services, Public Health, 4202 Epidemiology, 4203 Health services and systems, 4206 Public health

Abstract:

PURPOSE: Policymakers have struggled to maintain SARS-CoV-2 transmission at levels that are manageable to contain the COVID-19 disease burden while enabling a maximum of societal and economic activities. One of the tools that have been used to facilitate this is the so-called "COVID-19 pass". We aimed to document current evidence on the effectiveness of COVID-19 passes, distinguishing their indirect effects by improving vaccination intention and uptake from their direct effects on COVID-19 transmission measured by the incidence of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths. METHODS: We performed a scoping review on the scientific literature of the proposed topic covering the period January 2021 to September 2022, in accordance with the PRISMA-ScR guidelines for scoping reviews. RESULTS: Out of a yield of 4,693 publications, 45 studies from multiple countries were retained for full-text review. The results suggest that implementing COVID-19 passes tends to reduce the incidence of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths due to COVID-19. The use of COVID-19 passes was also shown to improve overall vaccination uptake and intention, but not in people who hold strong anti-COVID-19 vaccine beliefs. CONCLUSION: The evidence from the literature we reviewed tends to indicate positive direct and indirect effects from the use of COVID-19 passes. A major limitation to establishing this firmly is the entanglement of individual effects of multiple measures being implemented simultaneously.