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Most Seniors don’t get
Shingles Vaccination, CDC finds
Source: Health Behavior News Service
Newswise, January 12, 2011 — Although a vaccine to
prevent shingles has been available since
2006, less than 7 percent of U.S. seniors —
the demographic most frequently affected by
the disease — chose to receive the
vaccination as of 2008, finds a new study
from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC).
The vaccine reduces the risk of getting shingles by half
and the risk of developing painful
complications by two-thirds, according to
Gary Euler, study co-author. Since the
chance of contracting shingles increases
with age and especially is high by age 80,
when seniors are frail, he believes the
value of the vaccine is incontestable.
Specifically, the vaccine protects against the herpes
zoster virus, which causes chicken pox at
first infection. The body never rids itself
of the virus and it can show up again
decades later as shingles.
Symptoms include headache, fever and tingling or
throbbing accompanied by jabs of stabbing
pain called post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN),
followed by a skin rash and blisters.
Up to 10 in every thousand seniors develop shingles every
year. Without the vaccination, 10 percent to
14 percent of them will suffer from
neuralgia.
In the new study appearing online and in the February
2011 issue of the American Journal of
Preventive Medicine, researchers found that
estimated coverage levels were low among all
seniors and lowest among minority groups.
Surprisingly, 95 percent of younger seniors had missed at
least one opportunity to be vaccinated, even
though they had seen their physician at
least once, been hospitalized or visited an
emergency department that year. The people
most likely to have received vaccinations
were older, white, female seniors who were
more highly educated and who had received a
flu shot.
From the results of an earlier study, the researchers can
see that uptake is growing, but at a snail’s
pace. The study authors gave possible
reasons: While most insurance and Medicare
plans cover the cost of vaccination, other
costs might be out-of-pocket and upfront.
Physicians could be reluctant to recommend the vaccine
because of this cost burden, especially if
the patient has no insurance.
A downside exists for the physicians, too. Euler, an
epidemiologist with the CDC’s National
Center for Immunization and Respiratory
Diseases, said that the vaccine must remain
frozen until the last minute, which presents
an added burden on two counts.
First, there is a time lapse if the physician writes a
prescription for the patient to buy the
vaccine at a pharmacy and bring it back to
the office to have it administered.
Second, if a physician writes a prescription for the
patient to receive the vaccine at the
pharmacy, patients often do not make that
additional trip.
Despite these drawbacks, Euler strongly recommends that
seniors receive vaccinations for shingles.
“Most patients who know what PHN is like would absolutely
agree,” Euler said. “And in terms of cost
savings for medical attention and medicine
on a population-wide basis, so would most
economists.”