Connecticut Post

Why adults should prioritize vaccines this winter

- BRANDPOINT

With COVID-19 cases on the rise and flu season underway, it is more important than ever to prioritize your health.

Social distancing will become more difficult in the winter months. With everyone spending more time indoors, it’s essential to take every precaution to help keep yourself and your loved ones safe. One important first step is talking with your doctor or pharmacist to ensure you’re up to date with your vaccines.

Now, more than ever, it is important for people to be fully up to date on the vaccines we do have to help prevent disease. Primary care physicians and pharmacies have created safe places and protocols for adults to get vaccines during the pandemic crisis and it’s important to continue with routine healthcare.

A couple of years ago, father, business owner and Rhode Island native Steve B. was forced to spend the holidays sidelined with shingles at the age of 51.

As Steve remembers it, “I look forward to the holidays every year. In addition to the fun and festivitie­s of the season, I get a little downtime to enjoy my favorite things: spending time with my family, working out and watching sports. But that holiday season, I felt an odd burning pain I’d never felt before.”

Steve and his wife were on their way to a New Year’s Eve party when he started to feel discomfort and pain in his back. Steve’s wife looked but didn’t see anything unusual. Steve expected the pain to subside on its own. However, the next morning, when he asked his wife to look at his back again, she was shocked to find a blistered rash. He knew he had to seek medical attention - fast. When Steve was finally able to see his doctor, he was immediatel­y diagnosed with shingles - a vaccine-preventabl­e disease that according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) affects almost 1 out of 3 people in the U.S.

Most illnesses, hospitaliz­ations, disability and deaths from vaccine-preventabl­e illnesses occur among adults. An estimated average of 50,000 Americans die of vaccine-preventabl­e diseases each year - with adults, and especially older adults, disproport­ionally impacted, according to CDC. Thousands more suffer serious health problems that could have been prevented with recommende­d immunizati­ons.

According to a 2020 survey* conducted by The Harris Poll on behalf of GSK, the vast majority of primary care physicians (95 percent) say staying up to date on their vaccines is one of the most important things older adults can do to stay healthy. Seventy-three percent of adults ages 50-59 believe it is absolutely essential, extremely important or very important for adults their age to get vaccinated, however, around one-third or more of adults in this age group have never heard of or are unfamiliar with many of the vaccines recommende­d for them.

Shingles is one of more than 20 diseases that can now be prevented by vaccinatio­n. Adults ages 50 and older may need a number of vaccines, based on their age, underlying medical conditions, lifestyle, prior vaccinatio­ns and other considerat­ions. Recommende­d adult vaccines protect against diseases like influenza, pneumococc­al disease, shingles, hepatitis, pertussis and tetanus.

To learn more about adult vaccinatio­ns, visit broughtbyv­accines.com.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States