Several scientists, namely; Pop-Vicas A, Rahman M, Gozalo PL, Gravenstein S, and Mor V, conducted a research throughout 2000-2009, to estimate the effect of influenza vaccination on hospitalization and mortality in nursing home (NH) residents.
According to results copyrighted by Authors Journal compilation and The American Geriatrics Society, more than 1 million Medicare fee-for-service, long-stay NH residents participated in the research.
As explained in their publication entitled “Estimating the Effect of Influenza Vaccination on Nursing Home Residents’ Morbidity and Mortality”, weekly facility outcome aggregates of NH resident pneumonia and influenza (P&I) hospitalizations and all-cause mortality and city-level P&I mortality as reported by the CDC were created. The seasonal vaccine match rate forinfluenza A/H1N1, A/H3N2, and B strains was calculated, and each outcome was compared in seasons of high and low match rates using facility fixed-effects regression models separately for full-year and nonsummer months.
As a result, the publication stated that average weekly all-cause mortality varied across seasons from 3.74 to 4.13 per 1,000 NH residents per week, and hospitalization for P&I varied from 2.05 to 2.43. Vaccine match rates were invariably high for H1N1 but variable across seasons for the other two types. The association between vaccine match and reduction in overall mortality and P&I hospitalizations was strongest for A/H3N2, the influenza strain typically responsible for the most-severe influenza cases. Given the approximately 130,000 deaths and 77,000 P&I hospitalizations of long-stay NH residents during the 32 nonsummer weeks, the model estimated that a 50-percentage-point increase in the A/H3N2 match rate (from <25% to >75%) reduced long-stay NH resident deaths by 2.0% and P&I hospitalizations by 4.2%.
In conclusion, it has been stated that well-matched influenza vaccine prevents P&I hospitalizations and mortality in NH residents.