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The Flu and Yu

Started by CountDeMoney, January 14, 2013, 07:39:38 AM

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CountDeMoney

QuoteWhy 64.8 percent of Americans didn't get a flu shot



As the country's flu outbreak becomes an epidemic, odds are that you've had a few sheepish feelings about not doing something you probably should have: Gotten a flu shot.

As of this November, the majority of American adults – 64.8 percent, to be exact – had not received a flu immunization. This wasn't a surprise to researchers: Flu is a disease with one the lowest vaccination rates.

Though more than 95 percent of students entered kindergarten last year immunized against measles, mumps and rubella, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 36.5 percent of all Americans received flu vaccinations by November 2012.

It's worth noting that the percentage does tend to rise over the course of flu season: By March 2012 vaccination rates had grown to 47.6 percent from 36.3 percent in November 2011.



Why are flu vaccination rates so low? Lori Uscher-Pines, a policy researcher at the RAND Corp., estimates that part of the issue has to do with no consequences for not getting vaccinated (well, except for coming down with the flu). Unlike childhood vaccines, which are generally required to start a school year, employers don't stop their workers' from coming to work if they cannot prove flu immunization.

"Children have regular encounters like well child visits where they get vaccinated," she said. "There's a constant contact with the health-care system."

Americans also tend to have negative perceptions about the flu vaccine. A study Uscher-Pines did in 2011 found that about half of those who did not get vaccinated agreed with statements such as "I don't need it" or "I don't believe in flu vaccines."



Some of these complaints do have a kernel of truth to them: Flu vaccines tend to have a lower efficacy rate than other immunizations. Patients given the MMR vaccination (measles, mumps and rubella), for example, have a 95 percent chance of developing immunity to those diseases (97 percent for mumps).

This year's flu vaccine is 62 percent effective, meaning that those who receive the vaccination are 62 percent less likely to develop the flu than those who don't. That does leave space for someone who receives the vaccine to become sick but, as public health officials would argue, gives them better odds than an individual without any protection at all.

Flu vaccines are tricky, in no small part because the disease "mutates often," The Washington Post's Lena H. Sun explains, "and the antibodies that people produce only protect them through one flu season." As one CDC official told her, "The nature of flu viruses and the complexity of the human immune response makes it very difficult to develop a 100-percent effective vaccine."

What can convince Americans to get immunized? Researchers at Wake Forest University recently conducted an experiment on this subject, and their findings weren't exactly optimistic.

The team — led by economists Fred Chen, Allin Cottrell and Amanda Griffith — had participants play a not-so-fun video game that simulated the spread of the flu.

Players could earn points (later converted into gift cards) by staying healthy. They could also spend some of those points to buy a vaccine.

In other words, they faced a choice: Should they pony up on a preventive measure early or roll the dice, save a few bucks and not buy the vaccine?

Researchers found that a few external factors made participants more likely to buy a vaccine. If the immunization was cheaper, vaccination rates went up. As the number of infections went up, too, players became more likely to decide to take the plunge and pay for immunization.

That research gels with what we're seeing now: As the flu epidemic has spread, so has desire for flu vaccines — and so has flu vaccine shortages. It's just what the economists expected to happen.


Caliga

I get one every year.  When I lived in Boston, company paid for it (since it was a medical center, after all).  Now, company doesn't cover it but a) I'd just been in the habit of getting one, and b) since I have asthma anything that messes with my respiratory system is magnified by 10 due to the asthma.
0 Ed Anger Disapproval Points

Martinus

I've been getting one each year for the last 10 years or so.

grumbler

I've never gotten the vaccine, and never gotten the flu.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

Brazen

Only the elderly and infirm get flu shots here.

Darth Wagtaros

I got one this year, because it was free and I felt impulsive. Generally I would never bother since there are greater odds the vaccination will make me sick than me actually getting the flu.
PDH!

Josquius

Aren't they in limited supply and prioritised for at risk groups? :unsure:
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sbr

That's my thought too tyr.  I'm not necessarily opposed to it but it have never bothered to yet one.

CountDeMoney

Quote from: Tyr on January 14, 2013, 08:14:07 AM
Aren't they in limited supply and prioritised for at risk groups? :unsure:

I heard there were some shortages a few weeks ago, but nothing earth-shattering.


I never used to get one, but since I've had 6 in a row administered by work--and got one from the local pharmacy this season--I haven't had anything nasty since 2003 when I had a bout of pneumonia, knock on wood.

I usually wait until December or January for it, I don't get the early batches in Sept-Oct.

Grey Fox

I had the flu when I was 12, never gotten a vaccine. I've thought about getting it this year (free since I have an under 2 years old & my gf is pregnant) but I never got around to it.
Colonel Caliga is Awesome.

The Larch

Never got it. AFAIK only the elderly and sick get it over here.

Ed Anger

I get them yearly after the flu( and its buddy, pneumonia) nearly kilt me in in the early 90's
Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

Admiral Yi

Used to not get it, last two years I have.

Eddie Teach

Really need to start, I've been getting flu pretty regularly the past 5 years or so.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?

Malthus

I get mine through work.

The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane—Marcus Aurelius