Adverse Events Following COVID-19 Vaccination: A Comprehensive Analysis Of Spontaneous Reporting Data In Ghana.
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PLOS Global Public Health
Abstract
Vaccines are important public health tools and formed part of the fight against the COVID 19 pandemic. Five COVID-19 vaccines were given Emergency Use Authorization in Ghana
and deployed during the pandemic. Early phase trials of the vaccines were mostly not con ducted in Africans. This study examines safety data during their deployment under real-life
conditions in Ghana. This study analysed secondary data on COVID-19 vaccine-related
adverse events following immunization (AEFI) reported to the Ghana Food and Drugs
Authority (GFDA) between March 2021 and June 2022 using STATA. AEFIs were coded
with their Preferred Terms using the Medical Dictionary for Regulatory Activities, version
24.0. Statistical tests examined associations between demographic characteristics, vaccine
types, seriousness, and AEFI outcomes. Binary logistic regression model assessed factors
associated with serious AEFIs, while the GFDA’s Joint COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Review
Committee provided causality assessments of serious AEFIs. Overall cumulative incidence
of AEFIs was about 25 per 100,000 persons vaccinated. Across the five vaccines, majority
of the AEFIs reported were not serious (98.7%) with higher incidences in those below 50
years (74.0%) and females (51.2%). The most common AEFIs recorded were headache
(52.9%), pains (44.4%), pyrexia (35.1%), chills (16.7%) and injection site pain (15.6%). Rel ative to those 50 years and above, the odds of serious AEFI were 60% less among those
aged <30 years (aOR = 0.40, CI: [0.19, 0.86], p = 0.019). However, a causality assessment
of the 57 serious AEFIs indicated only 8 (14%) were vaccine product-related. There was a
low incidence of AEFIs following deployment of the vaccines in Ghana with a much lower
incidence of serious AEFIs. Informing the public about the safety of the vaccines and poten tial side effects may increase trust and acceptance, decreasing hesitancy in current and
future vaccination programmes.
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Research Article
Citation
Asare AF, Sabblah GT, Buabeng RO, Alhassan Y, Asamoa-Amoakohene A, Amponsa Achiano K, et al. (2024) Adverse events following COVID-19 vaccination: A comprehensive analysis of spontaneous reporting data in Ghana. PLOS Glob Public Health 4(9): e0003770. https://doi.org/ 10.1371/journal.pgph.0003770.
