Kim Beckham, an insurance agent in Victoria, Texas, had seen friends suffer so badly from shingles that she wanted to receive the first approved shingles vaccine as soon as it became available, even if she had to pay for it out-of-pocket.
Her doctor and several pharmacies turned her down because she was below the recommended age at the time, which was 60. So, in 2016, she celebrated her 60th birthday at her local CVS.
鈥淚 was there when they opened,鈥 Beckham recalled. After getting her Zostavax shot, she said, 鈥淚 felt really relieved.鈥 She has since received the newer, more effective shingles vaccine, as well as a pneumonia shot, an RSV vaccine to guard against respiratory syncytial virus, annual flu shots and all recommended covid-19 vaccinations.
Some older people are really eager to be vaccinated.
Robin Wolaner, 71, a retired publisher in Sausalito, California, has been known to badger friends who delay getting recommended shots, sending them relevant medical studies. 鈥淚鈥檓 sort of hectoring,鈥 she acknowledged.
Deana Hendrickson, 66, who provides daily care for three young grandsons in Los Angeles, sought an additional MMR shot, though she was vaccinated against measles, mumps, and rubella as a child, in case her immunity to measles had waned.
For older adults who express more confidence in vaccine safety than younger groups, the past few months have brought welcome research. Studies have found important benefits from a newer vaccine and enhanced versions of older ones, and one vaccine may confer a major bonus that nobody foresaw.
The new studies are coming at a fraught political moment. The nation鈥檚 health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has long disparaged certain vaccines, calling them unsafe and saying that the government officials who regulate them are compromised and corrupt.
On June 9, Kennedy fired a panel of scientific advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and later replaced them with some who have been skeptical of vaccines. But so far, Kennedy has not tried to curb access to the shots for older Americans.
The evidence that vaccines are beneficial remains overwhelming.
The phrase 鈥淰accines are 鈥 has become a favorite for William Schaffner, an infectious diseases specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
鈥淭he population over 65, which often suffers the worst impact of respiratory viruses and others, now has the benefit of vaccines that can prevent much of that serious illness,鈥 he said.
Take influenza, which annually sends from 140,000 to 710,000 people to hospitals, most of them seniors, and is fatal to 10% of hospitalized older adults.听
For about 15 years, the CDC has approved several enhanced flu vaccines for people 65 and older. More effective than the standard formulation, they either contain higher levels of the antigen that builds protection against the virus or incorporate an adjuvant that creates a stronger immune response. Or they鈥檙e recombinant vaccines, developed through a different method, with higher antigen levels.
In a meta-analysis in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 鈥渁ll the enhanced vaccine products were superior to the standard dose for preventing hospitalizations,鈥 said Rebecca Morgan, a health research methodologist at Case Western Reserve University and an author of the study.
Compared with the standard flu shot, the from the flu in older adults, by at least 11% and up to 18%. The CDC advises , as many already do.
More good news: Vaccines to prevent respiratory syncytial virus in people 60 and older are performing admirably.
RSV is the most common cause of hospitalization for infants, and it also poses significant risks to older people. 鈥淪eason in and season out,鈥 Schaffner said, 鈥渋t produces outbreaks of serious respiratory illness that rivals influenza.鈥
Because the FDA first approved an RSV vaccine in 2023, the 2023-24 season provided 鈥渢he first opportunity to see it in a real-world context,鈥 said Pauline Terebuh, an epidemiologist at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine and an author of a in the journal JAMA Network Open.
In analyzing electronic health records for almost 800,000 patients, the researchers found the vaccines to be 75% effective against acute infection, meaning illness that was serious enough to send a patient to a health care provider.
The vaccines were 75% effective in preventing emergency room or urgent care visits, and 75% effective against hospitalization, both among those ages 60 to 74 and those older.
Immunocompromised patients, despite having a somewhat lower level of protection from the vaccine, will also benefit from it, Terebuh said. As for adverse effects, the study found a very low risk for Guillain-Barr茅 syndrome, a rare condition that causes muscle weakness and that typically follows an infection, in about 11 cases per 1 million doses of vaccine. That, she said, 鈥渟houldn鈥檛 dissuade people.鈥
The CDC now recommends RSV vaccination for people 75 and older, and for those 60 to 74 if they鈥檙e at higher risk of severe illness (from, say, heart disease).
As data from the 2024-25 season becomes available, researchers hope to determine whether the vaccine will remain a one-and-done, or whether immunity will require repeated vaccination.
People 65 and up express the greatest confidence in vaccine safety of any adult group, a KFF survey found in April. More than 80% said they were 鈥渧ery 鈥渙r 鈥渟omewhat confident鈥 about MMR, shingles, pneumonia, and flu shots.
Although the covid vaccine drew lower support among all adults, more than two-thirds of older adults expressed confidence in its safety.
Even skeptics might become excited about one possible benefit of the shingles vaccine: This spring, Stanford researchers reported that over seven years, vaccination against shingles , a finding that made headlines.
Biases often undermine observational studies that compare vaccinated with unvaccinated groups. 鈥淧eople who are healthier and more health-motivated are the ones who get vaccinated,鈥 said Pascal Geldsetzer, an epidemiologist at the Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience at Stanford and lead author of the study.
鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to know whether this is cause and effect,鈥 he said, 鈥渙r whether they鈥檙e less likely to develop dementia anyway.鈥
So the Stanford team took advantage of a 鈥渘atural experiment鈥 when the first shingles vaccine, Zostavax, was introduced in Wales. Health officials set a strict age cutoff: People who turned 80 on or before Sept. 1, 2013, weren鈥檛 eligible for vaccination, but those even slightly younger were eligible.
In the sample of nearly 300,000 adults whose birthdays fell close to either side of that date, almost half of the eligible group received the vaccine, but virtually nobody in the older group did.
鈥淛ust as in a randomized trial, these comparison groups should be similar in every way,鈥 Geldsetzer explained. A substantial reduction in dementia diagnoses in the vaccine-eligible group, with a much stronger protective effect in women, therefore constitutes 鈥渕ore powerful and convincing evidence,鈥 he said.
The team also found reduced rates of dementia after shingles vaccines were and other countries. 鈥淲e keep seeing this in one dataset after another,鈥 Geldsetzer said.
In the United States, where a more potent vaccine, Shingrix, became available in 2017 and supplanted Zostavax, Oxford investigators found .
By matching almost 104,000 older Americans who received a first dose of the new vaccine (full immunization requires two) with a group that had received the earlier formulation, they found delayed onset of dementia in the Shingrix group.
How a shingles vaccine might reduce dementia remains unexplained. Scientists have suggested that viruses themselves may contribute to dementia, so suppressing them could protect the brain. Perhaps the vaccine revs up the immune system in general or affects inflammation.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anybody knows,鈥 said Paul Harrison, a psychiatrist at Oxford and a senior author of the study. But, he added, 鈥淚鈥檓 now convinced there鈥檚 something real here.鈥
Shingrix, now recommended for adults over 50, in preventing shingles and the lingering nerve pain that can result. In 2021, however, had received one dose of either shingles vaccine.
A connection to dementia will require further research, and Geldsetzer is trying to raise philanthropic funding for a clinical trial.
And 鈥渋f you needed another reason to get this vaccine,鈥 Schaffner said, 鈥渉ere it is.鈥
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