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For the first time, we have vaccines that can protect older adults against three leading—and sometimes fatal—respiratory viral diseases: influenza, COVID and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). This is a breakthrough; studies show that these vaccines are effective at protecting older adults from severe disease outcomes, including hospitalization and death.
Yet some seniors—including many who live in nursing homes—aren’t getting these vaccines. And the prevaccine days of the COVID pandemic showed us how deadly respiratory illness could be among older people in group settings. As scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, we have been tracking vaccination rates among older people. Given how easily these diseases are spread, and the possibility of severe disease with long and complex hospitalizations, we must do more to help inoculate them.
As this winter respiratory virus season winds down, it’s crucial we start planning for the next one. We can use the lessons we’ve learned from the vaccine rollouts for flu, COVID and RSV to give seniors the best shot at protection.
Older adults have a higher risk of severe disease and death from these respiratory virus infections compared to other age groups. Both their first-line innate immune responses and their slower, infection-specific adaptive immune responses decline. This decline, combined with higher rates of chronic diseases such as heart disease and diabetes and—for people who live in long-term care facilities—an increased chance of disease spread, leaves older folks at risk for severe disease and death.
Improving the use of these vaccines through the fall and winter respiratory illness seasons could mean healthier seniors and fewer visits to urgent care and the emergency department and fewer hospitalizations.
In 2022–2023, experts estimate that flu vaccination prevented nearly 31,000 hospitalizations and 2,500 deaths among people ages 65 and older. COVID vaccination greatly lowered rates of hospitalizations and deaths among adults ages 65 years and older too. And in clinical trials, the new RSV vaccines had an efficacy of 83 to 89 percent in preventing symptomatic RSV in the lower respiratory tract in adults ages 60 years and older.
The CDC’s latest data show that as of late March, 74 percent of adults age 65 years and older had gotten the flu vaccine and just 42 percent had received the updated COVID vaccine. Although coverage for influenza vaccine is trending slightly higher than at this point last year, COVID vaccine coverage remains about as low as last year. Among those ages 60 years and older, 24 percent had gotten an RSV vaccine. As of late March, only 43 percent of nursing home residents had received an updated COVID vaccine; as of December 10, 72 percent had received an influenza vaccine and 10 percent had received an RSV vaccine.
The fact that nearly three quarters of older adults received a flu vaccine this season, as opposed to less than half for the COVID vaccine, shows us that we have a lot of work to do to help people get up-to-date on COVID vaccines. And there is more to be done to help people and their providers understand whether an RSV vaccine is right for them.
The CDC surveyed unvaccinated older folks to better understand their reasons for not getting vaccinated, and the results varied. People 65 and older who said they were probably or definitely not going to get the influenza vaccine were concerned primarily about vaccine effectiveness and side effects and said they were not worried about the flu. For the COVID vaccine, participants most often shared concerns about heart-related or unknown serious side effects, followed by concerns about effectiveness and having “vaccine fatigue,” meaning they were likely burned out on vaccine information. The primary reasons for people age 60 and older not getting the RSV vaccine were not being worried about RSV, not knowing enough about RSV or the RSV vaccine, and the vaccine being “too new.”
These reasons for not getting vaccinated and the differences across vaccines are perhaps understandable in the context of where we are in the vaccine rollouts. Influenza vaccines have been licensed in the U.S. since the 1940s. In contrast, COVID vaccines were introduced little more than three years ago, and while these vaccines have undergone the most rigorous safety monitoring in U.S. history, some people still have misconceptions about the vaccines’ safety.
In addition, the vaccine fatigue expressed by respondents to the CDC survey is a genuine challenge. In the early days of COVID vaccines, older adults enthusiastically accepted vaccination. But over time, fewer and fewer seniors have been willing to get additional recommended doses. Many people are also less concerned about COVID itself, despite the fact that many people are still dying from it each day in the U.S.
RSV vaccines were licensed in 2023—and from prior new vaccine rollouts we know that it can take years for vaccination coverage to increase. Moreover, instead of recommending that all adults 60 years and older get vaccinated, the CDC recommended that people and their health care providers have a conversation to determine if RSV vaccination is right for them. As a result, not all eligible adults are likely to get the vaccine.
Plus it is hard for some people to access vaccines. On one hand there is ample supply of all three vaccines, and they are covered by Medicare and many private insurance plans at no out-of-pocket cost. Still, there are around 400,000 people age 65 and older who are uninsured. Nonetheless, the health care provider or facility has to absorb the up-front costs of purchasing vaccines and then seek reimbursement for vaccination.
Furthermore, disparities in access to health care among ethnic and racial groups make getting respiratory vaccines challenging for some communities in the U.S. For example, during the 2022–2023 season, influenza vaccination coverage among adults ages 65 years and older ranged from 54 percent in American Indian/Alaska Native people to 71 percent in non-Hispanic white people.
There also are barriers to receiving these three vaccines within a relatively short period of time. Even though the CDC says that influenza, COVID and RSV vaccines can be given at the same time, not everyone is open to that. Furthermore, each of these vaccines became available at different points in time during this past season, which made it more difficult for people to receive these vaccines at once. For some, it may not have been a priority or a possibility to return for a follow-up visit for additional vaccines that they were unable to receive on prior visits.
Long-term care facilities face additional unique challenges to vaccinating residents, including the monumental task of strengthening vaccine confidence and demand not only among residents but also among staff at the facilities and family members involved in residents’ medical decisions. In addition, long-term care facilities may not have the necessary infrastructure, staffing and financial resources to routinely offer vaccines to residents. Furthermore, the end of the Public Health Emergency and transition from a federal COVID vaccine distribution system to a commercialized market ended certain regulatory flexibilities and continued the shift to more sustainable channels for vaccinating residents, though with fewer dedicated resources.
The relatively high influenza vaccination coverage among older adults suggests that it is possible to get more older people vaccinated for all recommended vaccines. The CDC is working to improve access to adult vaccines through programs such as the Bridge Access Program, which provides COVID vaccines at no cost to uninsured or underinsured adults. The CDC is working to strengthen confidence in and demand for vaccines; to communicate the benefits of vaccination to the public, and to use data to target vaccination efforts. In addition, because a strong recommendation from a health care provider remains the leading reason why people choose to get vaccinated, the CDC has worked to equip providers with resources on vaccine recommendations and on having effective conversations with patients about vaccines.
It will take ground-up efforts across every community, vaccination provider location and household around the U.S. to ensure that older adults get not only the respiratory virus vaccines but all recommended vaccines.
The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
This is an opinion and analysis article, and the views expressed by the author or authors are not necessarily those of Scientific American.