However, it seems that some doctors also question the value of the flu vaccination programs, and even the evidence for their value in the elderly is a bit all over the place:
Only among people who suffer bronchitis could he find good evidence that flu vaccination was worthwhile. In infants up to two, vaccination was no better than placebo and in older children there was little evidence of benefit.
Nor could he find enough evidence of benefit among people with chronic chest problems, asthma and cystic fibrosis.
In healthy adults the best evidence was that, on average, flu vaccination of a population would prevent 0.1 per cent of a working day lost.
Combined studies of the elderly showed a variation from no effect to a 60 per cent difference when "all cause mortality" was measured.
"These findings are both counter-intuitive and implausible as other causes of death are far more prevalent in older people," he writes.
Score one for my mother?
1 comment:
Completely agree with her - I refuse to have 'em and watch others go down with it. Better be careful what I say. winter's coming.
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