COVID and flu vaccine rates are declining for US health care workers, CDC reports: ‘Disturbing trend’

From WWW.FOXNEWS.COM

Fewer U. S. health care workers are keeping up to date on their COVID-19 and flu vaccinations, according to two separate reports this week from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

For the first study, researchers pulled data from the CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) for January to June 2023.

They found that flu vaccine coverage was 81% among health care employees at hospitals and 47.1% at nursing homes.

In terms of COVID vaccine coverage for medical workers, it was at just 7.2% at hospitals and 22.8% at nursing homes.

For COVID, "up-to-date" vaccination was defined as "receipt of a bivalent COVID-19 mRNA vaccine dose or completion of a primary series within the preceding two months."

"There is a need to promote evidence-based strategies to improve vaccination coverage among HCP (health care personnel)," the study authors wrote in the report.

"Tailored strategies might also be useful to reach all HCP with recommended vaccines and protect them and their patients from vaccine-preventable respiratory diseases."

In a second study, the CDC researchers analyzed the same data to determine the level of flu vaccination among health care personnel.

Prior to the COVID pandemic, flu vaccine coverage rose from 88.6% in 2017-2018 to 90.7% in 2019-2020.

However, the rate declined to 85.9% in the 2020-2021 season and dropped again to 81.1% in 2022-2023.

"Additional efforts are needed to implement evidence-based strategies to increase vaccination coverage among HCP and to identify factors associated with recent declines in influenza vaccination coverage," the researchers wrote in the report.

"This is a disturbing trend," noted Dr. Marc Siegel, clinical professor of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center and a Fox News medical contributor, upon reviewing the CDC data.

"Non-compliance is due largely to fear and politicization of misunderstanding of vaccines," he told Fox News Digital. "Both vaccines decrease severity much more than spread, although they do decrease viral load."

With the COVID vaccines, however, Siegel noted that there may be a longer "carryover effect" after previous vaccines or recent infections — "so there is a rationale for not taking it unless you are in a high-risk group or elderly, even if you are a health care worker."... (Read more)

Submitted 253 days ago


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