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Back to Infectious Disease Articles
Monday 21st February, 2005
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Studies which report that influenza vaccination reduces winter mortality risk
among the elderly by 50 percent maybe overestimated.
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CHICAGO – Observational studies which report that influenza
vaccination reduces winter mortality risk among the elderly by 50
percent may substantially overestimate the vaccination benefit,
according to the February 14 issue of The Archives of Internal Medicine,
one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Accurate determination of the impact of influenza on mortality is
difficult because the infection is often cleared before the onset of the
secondary complications that actually cause a person's death, according
to the article. Although influenza vaccination of the elderly in the
U.S. has increased from 15 to 20 percent before 1980 to 65 percent in
2001, the authors could find no correlation between this increasing
vaccination coverage after 1980 and declining deaths rates in any age
group. Observational studies may introduce a systematic bias that leads
to a substantial over-estimate of the impact of influenza vaccination on
mortality, the authors suggest.
Lone Simonsen, Ph.D., of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, and colleagues, used statistical models that
estimate the winter-seasonal all-cause mortality above an estimated
baseline to determine influenza-related mortality indirectly. Their
model incorporated information on deaths among the elderly from
pneumonia and influenza and all other causes from 33 winter seasons from
1968-2001. "Our results, based on national vital statistics, are simply
not consistent with the very large mortality benefits reported in
observational studies," the authors write. The authors suggest that this
disconnect may be explained by a disparity in who is likely to be
vaccinated. "Very ill elderly people, whose fragile health would make
them highly likely to die over the coming winter months, are less likely
to be vaccinated during the autumn vaccination period," they stated.

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"Our results have obvious implications for influenza vaccination
policy. … The present findings, and those of at least one other study,
indicate that the shortage [of influenza vaccine in the 2004-2005
season] will have little impact [on mortality]…," the authors conclude.
"Other cohort studies suggest that the shortage will have a tremendous
impact on mortality among the elderly. Either way, this vast disconnect
between conclusions from different studies must be sorted out."
Source:
JAMA and Archives Journals
| Author: |
Dr. Tamer Fouad, M.D.
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