Taking Shingles Pneumonia Vaccines Together Safe and Effective Health Discovery AARP Bulletin
Taking Shingles, Pneumonia Vaccines Together Safe and Effective - Health Discovery- AARP Bulletin
Their findings address a 2009 recommendation by the drugs' manufacturer, Merck & Co., that the zoster — or shingles — vaccine and pneumonia vaccine be given at least a month apart. As a result, vaccine experts feared fewer adults would get the zoster vaccine if it meant a separate trip to their doctor's office. CNRI/Photo Researchers Varicella-voster virus shingles TEM. "It's tough enough to get adults vaccinated," said Kevin P. High, M.D., chief of infectious diseases at Wake Forest Baptist Health in North Carolina. "The data from this study suggest that if patients want to get both vaccines at the same time, we shouldn't hesitate." Clyde Crumpacker, M.D., professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, said the results of Kaiser's study suggest Merck's approach is "overly cautious," especially considering that half of Americans who live to age 80 or older are likely to develop shingles, characterized by a painful rash. As the Kaiser study notes, only about 7 percent of seniors have received the vaccine. Rafael Harpaz, M.D., a medical epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the CDC's position has always been to give both vaccines together. "We did not think there was sufficient evidence [from Merck] to change good vaccination practices," he said.
Take Shingles Pneumonia Vaccines Together
Study finds two-for-one shot is safe effective
Older adults can safely take vaccines against pneumonia and at the same time without compromising the effectiveness of either, researchers with Kaiser Permanente have concluded in a new study published in the journal Vaccine.Their findings address a 2009 recommendation by the drugs' manufacturer, Merck & Co., that the zoster — or shingles — vaccine and pneumonia vaccine be given at least a month apart. As a result, vaccine experts feared fewer adults would get the zoster vaccine if it meant a separate trip to their doctor's office. CNRI/Photo Researchers Varicella-voster virus shingles TEM. "It's tough enough to get adults vaccinated," said Kevin P. High, M.D., chief of infectious diseases at Wake Forest Baptist Health in North Carolina. "The data from this study suggest that if patients want to get both vaccines at the same time, we shouldn't hesitate." Clyde Crumpacker, M.D., professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, said the results of Kaiser's study suggest Merck's approach is "overly cautious," especially considering that half of Americans who live to age 80 or older are likely to develop shingles, characterized by a painful rash. As the Kaiser study notes, only about 7 percent of seniors have received the vaccine. Rafael Harpaz, M.D., a medical epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the CDC's position has always been to give both vaccines together. "We did not think there was sufficient evidence [from Merck] to change good vaccination practices," he said.