Influenza vaccination rates increased among patients with asthma
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Influenza vaccination coverage among those with asthma increased to 50% in 2010-2011, up from 36% during the 2005-2006 influenza season, according to the CDC.
However, influenza vaccine coverage still lags behind the Healthy People 2020 target of 80% for children aged 6 months to 17 years and the 90% coverage goal for high-risk adults.
“Although persons with asthma are not more likely than others to get influenza, influenza can make asthma symptoms worse, trigger asthma attacks and lead to pneumonia or other complications that result in hospitalizations and even death,” the study researchers wrote in MMWR.
The most recent findings are based on responses from 32,636 participants in the National Health Interview Survey in 2010-2011.
During the survey period, coverage among those with current asthma increased the most in children aged 2 to 17 years — from 32.5% to 52.8% — and was similar to increases seen in children in the same age group without asthma — 15.9% to 38.8%.
This is the first update to influenza vaccine coverage statistics in patients with asthma since the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practice’s 2010-2011 decision to expanded influenza vaccine recommendations to include everyone aged at least 6 months.
“These findings highlight the need to increase awareness of the importance of seasonal influenza vaccination for people with asthma,” the CDC wrote.
The agency’s Task Force on Community Preventive Services recommends instituting multicomponent interventions to increase access to vaccination services by cutting out-of-pocket costs with initiatives such as provider and client reminder systems.
Disclosure: The study researchers report no relevant financial disclosures.