Author: Lerm, M.
Title: On the relationship between BCG coverage and national COVIDâ€19 outcome: could ‘heterologous’ herd immunity explain why some countries are better off? Cord-id: 1rcilzi0 Document date: 2020_12_14
ID: 1rcilzi0
Snippet: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic has affected most parts of the global society since its emergence, and the scientific community has been challenged with questions urgently demanding answers. One of the early hypotheses on COVIDâ€19 outcome was that some protection could be offered by the tuberculosis vaccine (BCG), and several clinical studies were initiated along with the emergence of numerous observational studies on the relationship between BCG and COVIDâ€19 severity. In the present work, I demonst
Document: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic has affected most parts of the global society since its emergence, and the scientific community has been challenged with questions urgently demanding answers. One of the early hypotheses on COVIDâ€19 outcome was that some protection could be offered by the tuberculosis vaccine (BCG), and several clinical studies were initiated along with the emergence of numerous observational studies on the relationship between BCG and COVIDâ€19 severity. In the present work, I demonstrate a strong correlation between the number of years that countries implemented BCG vaccination plans and ageâ€standardized mortality rates during the first months of the pandemic in Europe. Further analyses of age groups in two European countries with comparably few confounding factors and easily identifiable groups of BCGâ€vaccinated and nonâ€vaccinated subgroups suggest a populationâ€level effect of BCG on national outcomes of COVIDâ€19. This phenomenon of ‘heterologous herd immunity’ deserves further investigation, both in epidemiological and experimental studies.
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