NCBI
PubMed
A service of the
U.S. National Library of Medicine
and the
National Institutes of Health
My NCBI
[Sign In]
[Register]
All Databases
PubMed
Nucleotide
Protein
Genome
Structure
OMIM
PMC
Journals
Books
Search
Database name
PubMed
Protein
Nucleotide
GSS
EST
Structure
Genome
Books
CancerChromosomes
Conserved Domains
dbGaP
3D Domains
Gene
Genome Project
GENSAT
GEO Profiles
GEO DataSets
HomoloGene
Journals
MeSH
NCBI Web Site
NLM Catalog
OMIA
OMIM
PMC
PopSet
Probe
Protein Clusters
PubChem BioAssay
PubChem Compound
PubChem Substance
SNP
Taxonomy
ToolKit
UniGene
UniSTS
for
Search term
Go
Clear
Advanced Search
Limits
Preview/Index
History
Clipboard
Details
Your browser version may not work well with NCBI's Web applications. More information
here...
Display
Summary
Brief
Abstract
AbstractPlus
Citation
MEDLINE
XML
UI List
LinkOut
ASN.1
Related Articles
Cited in Books
CancerChrom Links
Domain Links
3D Domain Links
dbGaP Links
GEO DataSet Links
Gene Links
Gene (OMIM) Links
Gene (GeneRIF) Links
Genome Links
Project Links
GENSAT Links
GEO Profile Links
HomoloGene Links
Nucleotide Links
Nucleotide (RefSeq) Links
Nucleotide (Weighted) Links
EST Links
EST (RefSeq) Links
GSS Links
GSS (RefSeq) Links
OMIA Links
OMIM (calculated) Links
OMIM (cited) Links
BioAssay Links
Compound Links
Compound (MeSH Keyword)
Compound (Publisher) Links
Substance Links
Substance (MeSH Keyword)
Substance (Publisher) Links
PMC Links
Cited in PMC
PopSet Links
Probe Links
Protein Links
Protein (RefSeq) Links
Protein (Weighted) Links
Protein Cluster Links
Cited Articles
SNP Links
SNP (Cited)
Structure Links
Taxonomy via GenBank
UniGene Links
UniSTS Links
Show
5
10
20
50
100
200
500
Sort By
Pub Date
First Author
Last Author
Journal
Title
Send to
Text
File
Printer
Clipboard
Collections
E-mail
Order
All: 1
Review: 0
Click to change filter selection through MyNCBI.
1:
Arch Intern Med.
2005 Feb 14;165(3):265-72.
Related Articles
,
Links
Comment in:
Arch Intern Med. 2005 Sep 26;165(17):2037-8; author reply 2039-40.
Arch Intern Med. 2005 Sep 26;165(17):2038-9; author reply 2039-40.
Arch Intern Med. 2005 Sep 26;165(17):2038; author reply 2039-40.
Impact of influenza vaccination on seasonal mortality in the US elderly population.
Simonsen L
,
Reichert TA
,
Viboud C
,
Blackwelder WC
,
Taylor RJ
,
Miller MA
.
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892-6613, USA. Lsimonsen@niaid.nih.gov
BACKGROUND: Observational studies report that influenza vaccination reduces winter mortality risk from any cause by 50% among the elderly. Influenza vaccination coverage among elderly persons (> or =65 years) in the United States increased from between 15% and 20% before 1980 to 65% in 2001. Unexpectedly, estimates of influenza-related mortality in this age group also increased during this period. We tried to reconcile these conflicting findings by adjusting excess mortality estimates for aging and increased circulation of influenza A(H3N2) viruses. METHODS: We used a cyclical regression model to generate seasonal estimates of national influenza-related mortality (excess mortality) among the elderly in both pneumonia and influenza and all-cause deaths for the 33 seasons from 1968 to 2001. We stratified the data by 5-year age group and separated seasons dominated by A(H3N2) viruses from other seasons. RESULTS: For people aged 65 to 74 years, excess mortality rates in A(H3N2)-dominated seasons fell between 1968 and the early 1980s but remained approximately constant thereafter. For persons 85 years or older, the mortality rate remained flat throughout. Excess mortality in A(H1N1) and B seasons did not change. All-cause excess mortality for persons 65 years or older never exceeded 10% of all winter deaths. CONCLUSIONS: We attribute the decline in influenza-related mortality among people aged 65 to 74 years in the decade after the 1968 pandemic to the acquisition of immunity to the emerging A(H3N2) virus. We could not correlate increasing vaccination coverage after 1980 with declining mortality rates in any age group. Because fewer than 10% of all winter deaths were attributable to influenza in any season, we conclude that observational studies substantially overestimate vaccination benefit.
Publication Types:
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
PMID: 15710788 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Display
Summary
Brief
Abstract
AbstractPlus
Citation
MEDLINE
XML
UI List
LinkOut
ASN.1
Related Articles
Cited in Books
CancerChrom Links
Domain Links
3D Domain Links
dbGaP Links
GEO DataSet Links
Gene Links
Gene (OMIM) Links
Gene (GeneRIF) Links
Genome Links
Project Links
GENSAT Links
GEO Profile Links
HomoloGene Links
Nucleotide Links
Nucleotide (RefSeq) Links
Nucleotide (Weighted) Links
EST Links
EST (RefSeq) Links
GSS Links
GSS (RefSeq) Links
OMIA Links
OMIM (calculated) Links
OMIM (cited) Links
BioAssay Links
Compound Links
Compound (MeSH Keyword)
Compound (Publisher) Links
Substance Links
Substance (MeSH Keyword)
Substance (Publisher) Links
PMC Links
Cited in PMC
PopSet Links
Probe Links
Protein Links
Protein (RefSeq) Links
Protein (Weighted) Links
Protein Cluster Links
Cited Articles
SNP Links
SNP (Cited)
Structure Links
Taxonomy via GenBank
UniGene Links
UniSTS Links
Show
5
10
20
50
100
200
500
Sort By
Pub Date
First Author
Last Author
Journal
Title
Send to
Text
File
Printer
Clipboard
Collections
E-mail
Order
About Entrez
Text Version
Entrez PubMed
Overview
Help
|
FAQ
Tutorials
New/Noteworthy
E-Utilities
PubMed Services
Journals Database
MeSH Database
Single Citation Matcher
Batch Citation Matcher
Clinical Queries
Special Queries
LinkOut
My NCBI
Related Resources
Order Documents
NLM Mobile
NLM Catalog
NLM Gateway
TOXNET
Consumer Health
Clinical Alerts
ClinicalTrials.gov
PubMed Central
Write to the Help Desk
NCBI
|
NLM
|
NIH
Department of Health & Human Services
Privacy Statement
|
Freedom of Information Act
|
Disclaimer