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Flu Shots May Not Save Lives - US Study

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Flu

Shots May Not

Save Lives - US Study

2-14-5

 

 

 

 

 

CHICAGO (Reuters)

- The flu vaccinations that doctors hoped would save the lives of fragile

elderly people have apparently failed to lower death rates, U.S.

researchers said on Monday.

More people whose health could be put at risk by

influenza have heeded the call to get vaccinated before flu season, but the

death rate during the winter flu season remained the same rather than

declining, they said.

Based on U.S.

mortality rates from 1968 to 2001, the study by the National Institute of

Allergy and Infectious Diseases found no correlation between increasing

vaccination rates after 1980 and declining death rates in any age group.

" We conclude, therefore, that there are not

enough influenza-related deaths to support the conclusion that vaccination

can reduce total winter mortality among the U.S.

elderly population by as much as half, " study author Lone Simonsen wrote in The Archives of Internal Medicine.

Previous studies have estimated that vaccine

programs have cut mortality rates among the elderly by about half.

While the vaccination rate in 2001 rose to 65

percent among elderly Americans from around 20 percent before 1980, the rate

of excess winter deaths has remained flat instead of declining by an expected

40 percent.

Because deaths spiked in some years when a virulent

form of flu was epidemic, the findings may not be conclusive, the researchers

said.

The report suggested earlier observational studies

may have had skewed data. For one thing, influenza sufferers may have died

from secondary complications brought on by flu after their symptoms had

passed, it said. In addition, vaccines often fail to activate antibodies in

the elderly.

Further evidence may come after this flu season

since an initial U.S.

shortage of flu vaccine should have an effect on mortality rates, one way or

the other, the report said.

" Either way, this vast disconnect between

conclusions from different studies must be sorted out, " it said.

Copyright © 2005 Reuters Limited. All rights

reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters

content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.

Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for

any actions taken in reliance thereon.

http://today.reuters.com/news/

 

 

 

 

 

 

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