Vaccinating pregnant women with Tdap vaccine protects young infants from severe pertussis and hospitalization

Infants less than 2 months old are too young to be vaccinated against pertussis yet are at highest risk of severe disease – – a 75% hospitalization rate and a 1% case fatality rate. A case-control study in six U.S. states found that vaccinating women during the third trimester of pregnancy with Tdap vaccine provided 81% protection against pertussis to infants <2 months and 91% protection against hospitalized cases of pertussis.

Vaccinating pregnant women with Tdap vaccine is 81% effective in preventing pertussis in infants

Vaccinating women during their second or third trimester of pregnancy with the Tdap vaccine was 81% effective in preventing pertussis in their infants in the first two months of life, according to a case-control study in Argentina.

This is one of the first studies to measure the effectiveness of maternal pertussis vaccination in a middle-income country and its findings support Argentina’s decision to introduce the vaccine.

Immunizing pregnant women against influenza reduces the risk of illness and hospitalization in infants

Infants born to mothers who reported receiving influenza vaccination during pregnancy had a 64% lower risk of getting influenza-like illness in their first 6 months of life, a 70% lower risk of laboratory-confirmed influenza, and an 81% lower chance of being hospitalized with influenza than infants whose mothers did not report getting the influenza vaccine during pregnancy. Since influenza vaccines are not effective in children less than 6 months old, immunizing pregnant women against influenza is a public health priority.

Data is from a study spanning more than 8 years at a large healthcare organization in the Western U.S.

Switching to PCV13 for infants reduced drug-resistant IPD by 78-96% in children under five

A large U.S. study of surveillance data examining the impact of switching from PCV7 to PCV13 for infants demonstrated how important vaccination is in combating antimicrobial resistance. While the incidence of antibiotic-resistant invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) was increasing before the introduction of PCV13, drug resistant IPD declined 78-96% in children under five after the vaccine introduction.

Collapse of primary healthcare during humanitarian emergencies can lead to infectious disease outbreaks in neighboring areas

The humanitarian emergency in Venezuela, and resulting collapse of its primary health care infrastructure, has caused measles and diphtheria to reemerge — disproportionately affecting indigenous populations — and spread to neighboring countries. This sets the stage for the potential reemergence of polio. The re-establishment of measles as an endemic disease in Venezuela (with >5,500 confirmed cases) and its spread to neighboring countries threaten the measles-free status.

Vaccination of infants against pneumonia greatly reduces hospitalizations, saving millions in healthcare costs

In a study using actual data on hospitalizations and costs before and after PCV-10 vaccine was introduced in Brazil, an estimated 463,000 hospitalizations from all causes of pneumonia were prevented in persons less than 65 years of age over 5 years following introduction of the vaccine — saving an estimated US$147 million in hospitalization costs. Half of the costs averted were due to fewer hospitalizations in children under five, who were targeted for the vaccine, while the remaining half were due to fewer hospitalizations in persons 5-49 years of age, as a result of herd protection.

Immunization against rotavirus reduced hospitalizations in both children and adults via herd protection

Several studies in the U.S. have shown that hospitalizations due to rotavirus fell sharply in children too old to be vaccinated as well as in adults after rotavirus vaccines were introduced, indicating herd protection. In one large study, rotavirus hospitalizations in 2008 — two years after the first vaccine was introduced — declined by 71% in 5-14 year old children and by 65% in 15-24 year olds compared to the pre-vaccine period.

Immunization against rotavirus significantly reduced hospitalizations and emergency visits in children

Prior to the introduction of rotavirus vaccines in the U.S., there were an estimated 205,000 – 272,000 emergency department visits and 55,000 – 70,000 hospitalizations due to rotavirus in children each year. A series of studies found that hospitalizations in children under five due to rotavirus declined, on average by 80% from the pre-vaccine to the post-vaccine era, while both outpatient visits and emergency department visits due to rotavirus declined 57%.

>