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hortist
18 years ago

Benefits Of Flu Vaccine Substantially Overestimated Says Study

Date: 2005-12-21

Studies of influenza vaccine effectiveness in elderly people substantially overestimate vaccine benefits, according to new research from the US published today in the International Journal of Epidemiology (IJE), edited at the University of Bristol.

(see link for more)

No Evidence Flu Jabs Work for Under-2s - Study

Fri Feb 25, 7:07 AM ET

LONDON (Reuters) - There is no evidence that vaccinating children under

2 years old against influenza reduces deaths or complications from the

illness, researchers said on Friday.

They reviewed 25 studies that looked at the impact of vaccines in

cutting the number of cases of influenza and its symptoms in children up

to 16.

Children under 2 are vaccinated against flu in the United States and Canada.

"Immunization of very young children is not lent support by our

findings," said Dr Tom Jefferson, of the Cochrane Vaccines Field in

Rome, part of the international Cochrane Collaboration that evaluates

medical research.

"We recorded no convincing evidence that vaccines can reduce mortality,

admissions, serious complications and community transmission of

influenza," he added in a report in The Lancet medical journal.

Influenza vaccine campaigns are usually targeted at people over 65.

U.S. and Canadian health officials have recommended that children aged

6-23 months should also be immunized.

Last year the American Academy of Pediatrics updated its guidelines,

saying healthy babies under 2 should be routinely immunized against the

virus. It followed recommendations from the U.S. Centers for Disease

Control and Prevention (news - web sites).

Each year, influenza kills an average of 36,000 Americans and puts

114,000 in hospital.

"In young children below the age of 2, we could find no evidence that

the vaccine was different from a placebo," Jefferson told Reuters.

He added that the findings do not mean vaccinations do not work in young

children but they found no evidence that it does. There was no

indication the vaccines caused any harm or reason to believe they were

unsafe.

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