Frontiers in Public Health (Aug 2023)

Population-level benefits of increasing influenza vaccination uptake among Italian older adults: results from a granular panel model

  • Alexander Domnich,
  • Andrea Orsi,
  • Andrea Orsi,
  • Andrea Orsi,
  • Donatella Panatto,
  • Donatella Panatto,
  • Matilde Ogliastro,
  • Alessandra Barca,
  • Fabrizio Bert,
  • Fabrizio Bert,
  • Danilo Cereda,
  • Maria Chironna,
  • Claudio Costantino,
  • Daniel Fiacchini,
  • Elena Pariani,
  • Elena Pariani,
  • Caterina Rizzo,
  • Enrico Volpe,
  • Giancarlo Icardi,
  • Giancarlo Icardi,
  • Giancarlo Icardi,
  • The FluCoV Study Group,
  • Daniela Amicizia,
  • Federico Grammatico,
  • Catia Rosanna Borriello,
  • Francesco Chini,
  • Lorenza Ferrara,
  • Fabio Filippetti,
  • Daniela Loconsole,
  • Francesca Centrone,
  • Mario Palermo,
  • Simone Pizzini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1224175
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundThe impact of seasonal influenza vaccination (SIV) on mortality is still controversial; some studies have claimed that increasing vaccination coverage rates is beneficial, while others have found no significant association. This study aimed to construct a granular longitudinal dataset of local VCRs and assess their effect on pneumonia- and influenza-related (P&I) mortality among Italian adults aged ≥ 65 years.MethodsNUTS-3 (nomenclature of territorial units for statistics) level data on SIV coverage were collected via a survey of local data holders. Fixed- and random-effects panel regression modeling, when adjusted for potential confounders, was performed to assess the association between local SIV coverage rates and P&I mortality in older adults.ResultsA total of 1,144 local VCRs from 2003 to 2019 were ascertained. In the fully adjusted fixed-effects model, each 1% increase in vaccination coverage was associated (P < 0.001) with a 0.6% (95% CI: 0.3–0.9%) average over-time decrease in P&I mortality. With an annual average of 9,293 P&I deaths in Italy, this model suggested that 56 deaths could have been avoided each year by increasing SIV coverage by 1%. The random-effects model produced similar results. The base-case results were robust in a sensitivity analysis.ConclusionOver the last two decades, Italian jurisdictions with higher SIV uptake had, on average, fewer P&I deaths among older adults. Local policy-makers should implement effective strategies to increase SIV coverage in the Italian senior population.

Keywords