PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

Influenza-related mortality trends in Japanese and American seniors: evidence for the indirect mortality benefits of vaccinating schoolchildren.

  • Vivek Charu,
  • Cécile Viboud,
  • Lone Simonsen,
  • Katharine Sturm-Ramirez,
  • Masayoshi Shinjoh,
  • Gerardo Chowell,
  • Mark Miller,
  • Norio Sugaya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026282
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 11
p. e26282

Abstract

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The historical Japanese influenza vaccination program targeted at schoolchildren provides a unique opportunity to evaluate the indirect benefits of vaccinating high-transmitter groups to mitigate disease burden among seniors. Here we characterize the indirect mortality benefits of vaccinating schoolchildren based on data from Japan and the US.We compared age-specific influenza-related excess mortality rates in Japanese seniors aged ≥65 years during the schoolchildren vaccination program (1978-1994) and after the program was discontinued (1995-2006). Indirect vaccine benefits were adjusted for demographic changes, socioeconomics and dominant influenza subtype; US mortality data were used as a control.We estimate that the schoolchildren vaccination program conferred a 36% adjusted mortality reduction among Japanese seniors (95%CI: 17-51%), corresponding to ∼1,000 senior deaths averted by vaccination annually (95%CI: 400-1,800). In contrast, influenza-related mortality did not change among US seniors, despite increasing vaccine coverage in this population.The Japanese schoolchildren vaccination program was associated with substantial indirect mortality benefits in seniors.