Modern Healthcare

Efforts to move the needle on flu shot rates get stuck

- By Phil Galewitz Kaiser Health News Kaiser Health News is a national health policy news service. It is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

One factor that limits people from getting vaccinated is they don’t realize how dangerous flu and its complicati­ons, such as pneumonia, can be.

IT’S FREE AND AVAILABLE everywhere. Yet most Americans skip the annual flu shot—with the number of dispensed vaccines barely changed in the past decade, despite government removal of cost and access obstacles.

“We are kind of spinning our wheels trying to reach a larger portion of the population,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious-disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville and medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.

Public health officials recommend that nearly all people get the flu shot.

The 2010 Affordable Care Act required all insurers to waive out-ofpocket costs for plan members for the vaccinatio­ns and, in the past few years, all states allowed pharmacist­s to administer the shots, which have made them available in drugstores, grocery chains and big-box stores.

The flat immunizati­on rates worry public health officials who say the vaccine is the best weapon to prevent the flu, which caused as many as 61,000 deaths during the last flu season and hundreds of thousands of hospitaliz­ations.

“The number of Americans being vaccinated is not optimal,” Dr. Daniel Jernigan, director of the influenza division at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told the House Science, Space & Technology Committee during a recent hearing.

A key reason people choose not to get the flu vaccine is they perceive it doesn’t work, Jernigan said, although studies have found it is usually 40% to 60% effective. CDC and other officials at the hearing stressed that even when the vaccine doesn’t prevent infection, it can still reduce complicati­ons that land people in the hospital and cause death.

The federal government is working on creating a long-acting flu vaccine that can work against all known strains of the virus, but it’s at least several years away. The first human testing began on a small scale this year at the National Institutes of Health.

Immunizati­on rates among adults have hovered in the 40% to 45% range for the past decade. Among people 65 and older, who are most at risk for complicati­ons of the flu, 68% were inoculated last year, up from 67% in 2010.

Vaccinatio­n rates, however, have risen for children—increasing to 73% last year from 64% in 2011.

Another factor that limits people from getting vaccinated is they don’t realize how dangerous flu and its complicati­ons, such as pneumonia, can be.

“There is a perception that flu is a little worse than the common cold and there is not a huge level of worry,” said Dr. Jeff Salvon-Harman, chief patient safety officer at Presbyteri­an Healthcare Services, an integrated health plan in New Mexico with 590,000 health plan members.

People with flu often have high fever and muscle aches that make even the healthiest individual­s feel tired for up to a week.

In addition, flu can make chronic medical problems worse. For example, people with asthma may have attacks while infected with the flu.

Public health officials said they face other long-standing challenges, such as myths that the vaccine can cause the flu (it can’t) and that it contains dangerous levels of mercury (it doesn’t and people can request vaccines with no mercury).

Ge Bai, who holds a doctorate in accounting and is an associate professor of health policy at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, doesn’t get the flu shot.

“I think I can make myself much less vulnerable to flu by eating right, resting well and working out,” she said. “I don’t think the incrementa­l reduction of the estimated chance for me to get flu is worth my time to get the shot.”

Healthcare workers also often skip the vaccinatio­n, and if they become infected, they can spread the flu to people they treat, who likely already have serious health issues.

In Pennsylvan­ia last winter, longterm-care facilities reported 284 outbreaks of flu affecting more than 3,400 residents and staff. The state found only 69% of staff and 78% of residents were vaccinated.

“We need to do a better job of producing convincing messages” about the importance of the flu shot, said Dr. Sharon Watkins, Pennsylvan­ia’s chief epidemiolo­gist and president of the Council of State and Territoria­l Epidemiolo­gists. “We had hoped the rates would have changed.”

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