The 1980s Japanese experience -- wherein a requirement that Japanese schoolchildren get vaccinated against the flu led to a dramatic reduction in the death toll among seniors -- should have led our own CDC to mandate getting our schoolchildren vaccinated against the flu long ago. And it probably would have but for ongoing anti-vaccine superstition.
The benefits for seniors of also getting a pneumococcal vaccine (pneumonia shot) are clear as well -- and whereas flu shots must be received annually to be effective, pneumonia shots can provide some protection for several years after being administered.
These public health efforts can and should continue even while we research ways of making the flu vaccine more potent for seniors.
Dr. Gilbert Ross American Council on Science and Health New York, NY
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AMERICAN COUNCIL ON SCIENCE AND HEALTH 1995 BROADWAY, 2ND FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10023-5860 TELEPHONE: (212) 362-7044 TOLL FREE: (866) 905-2694 FAX: (212) 362-4919 E-MAIL: General organization mailbox: acsh@acsh.org ; Individual staffer: [last name or last name followed by first initial]@acsh.org