fbpx Moderate Effectiveness | Page 70 | Science in the net

Moderate Effectiveness

Read time: 1 min

A group of researchers from the University of Rochester Medical Center found that the effectiveness of US influenza vaccines during the 2010-2011 season was moderate, even if all 3 vaccine strains were well matched to circulating strains.

The authors of the work, published on Clinical Infectious Diseases, performed a case-control study on around 5000 patients with flu-like illness during the 2010–2011 flu season. The estimated efficacy of either inactivated or live-attenuated vaccine ranged from 69% in children aged 6 months-8 years to 38% in adults older than 65 years.

These results contrast those studies of poorly matched vaccines (estimated efficacy lower than 30%) but are nevertheless modest. Most of all, data regarding efficacy in older adults are concerning, although the low number of patients in this age group might have influenced this finding.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22843783?dopt=Abstract

Autori: 
Sezioni: 
Dossier: 
US influenza vaccines

prossimo articolo

Raising awareness on gender issues in epidemics and pandemics

Article published on the ASSET website

The consideration of sex and gender are not the most obvious issues that come to mind when discussing epidemics and pandemics. However, sex and gender have an important impact on these issues, since barriers to pandemic preparedness and risk behaviour can often be better understood when viewed from a sex and gender perspective.