Extra benefits when senior citizens get vaccinated


By AGENCY

Getting vaccinated against shingles, RSV and the flu could also help protect you against heart and lung issues, other respiratory diseases, as well as dementia. — TNS

Let’s be clear: The primary reason to be vaccinated against shingles is that two shots provide at least 90% protection against a painful, blistering disease that can cause lingering nerve pain and other nasty long-term consequences.

The most important reason for older adults to be vaccinated against the respiratory infection RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) is that their risk of being hospitalised with it declines by almost 70% in the year they get the shot, and by nearly 60% over two years.

ALSO READ: These two infections affect senior citizens more severely

And the main reason to roll up a sleeve for an annual flu shot is that when people do get infected, it reliably reduces the severity of illness, though its effectiveness varies by how well scientists have predicted which strain of influenza shows up in that particular season.

But other reasons for older people to be vaccinated are emerging.

Extra benefits

They are known, in doctor-speak, as off-target benefits, meaning that the shots do good things beyond preventing the diseases they were designed to avert.

The list of off-target benefits is lengthening as “the research has accumulated and accelerated over the last 10 years”, says Vanderbilt University Medical Center infectious disease specialist Dr William Schaffner in Tennessee, United States.

Some of these protections have been established by years of data.

Others are the subjects of more recent research and the payoff is not yet as clear.

The first RSV vaccines, for example, became available only in 2023.

Still, the findings “are really very consistent”, says geriatrician Dr Stefania Maggi, who is a Institute of Neuroscience senior fellow at the National Research Council in Padua, Italy.

She is the lead author of a recent meta-analysis, published in the journal Age And Ageing, which found reduced risks of dementia after vaccination for an array of diseases.

Given those “downstream effects”, she says, vaccines “are key tools to promote healthy ageing and prevent physical and cognitive decline”.

Yet, too many older adults, whose weakening immune systems and high rates of chronic illness put them at higher risk of infectious diseases, have not taken advantage of vaccination.

In the US, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported in early January (2026) that about 31% of older adults had not yet received a flu shot.

Only about 41% of adults 75 and older had ever been vaccinated against RSV, and about a third of seniors had received the most recent Covid-19 vaccine.

The US CDC recommends the one-and-done pneumococcal vaccine for adults 50 and older.

An analysis in the American Journal Of Preventive Medicine, however, estimated that from 2022 – when new guidelines were issued – through 2024, only about 12% of those 67 to 74 received it, and about 8% of those 75 and older.

Protecting the heart

The strongest evidence for off-target benefits, dating back 25 years, shows reduced cardiovascular (heart) risk following flu shots.

Healthy older adults vaccinated against flu have substantially lower risks of hospitalisation for heart failure, as well as for pneumonia and other respiratory infections.

Vaccination against influenza has also been associated with lower risks of heart attack and stroke.

ALSO READ: If you have the flu, you could get a heart attack a week later

Moreover, many of these studies predate the more potent flu vaccines now recommended for older adults.

Could the RSV vaccine, protective against another respiratory illness, have similar cardiovascular effects?

A recent large Danish study of older adults found a nearly 10% decline in cardiorespiratory hospitalisations (involving the heart and lungs) among the vaccinated versus a control group – a significant decrease.

Lowered rates of cardiovascular hospitalisations and stroke did not reach statistical significance, however.

That may reflect a short follow-up period or inadequate diagnostic testing, cautions University of Washington infectious disease specialist Dr Helen Chu, who co-authored an accompanying editorial in the medical journal JAMA.

“I don’t think RSV behaves differently from flu,” she says.

“It’s just too early to have the information for RSV, but I think it will show the same effect, maybe even more so.”

Vaccination against still another dangerous respiratory disease, Covid-19, has been linked to a lower risk of developing long Covid, with its damaging effects on physical and mental health.

Protecting against dementia

Probably the most provocative findings concern vaccination against shingles, aka herpes zoster.

Researchers made headlines last year when they documented an association between shingles vaccination and lower rates of dementia, even with the less effective vaccine that has since been replaced by the latest one approved in 2017.

ALSO READ: One vaccine protects against shingles and dementia

Nearly all studies of off-target benefits are observational, because scientists cannot ethically withhold a safe, effective vaccine from a control group whose members could then become infected with the disease.

That means such studies are subject to “healthy volunteer bias”, because vaccinated patients may also practise other healthy habits, differentiating them from those not vaccinated.

Although researchers try to control for a variety of potentially-confounding differences, from age and sex to health and education, “we can only say there’s a strong association, not a cause and effect”, Dr Maggi says.

But Stanford University researchers in the US seized on a natural experiment in Wales in 2013, when the first shingles vaccine, became available to older people who had not yet turned 80.

Anyone 80 and older was ineligible.

Over seven years, dementia rates in participants who had been eligible for vaccination declined by 20% – even though only half had actually received the vaccine – compared with those who narrowly missed the cut-off.

“There are no reasons people born one week before were different from those born a few days later,” Dr Maggi says.

Studies in Australia and the US have also found reductions in the odds of dementia following the administration of shingles shots.

More than one vaccine

In fact, in the meta-analysis Dr Maggi and her team published, several other childhood and adult vaccinations appeared to have such effects.

“We now know that many infections are associated with the onset of dementia, both Alzheimer’s and vascular,” she says.

In 21 studies involving more than 104 million participants in Europe, Asia and North America, vaccination against shingles was associated with a 24% reduction in the risk of developing dementia.

Flu vaccination was linked to a 13% reduction.

Those vaccinated against pneumococcal disease had a 36% reduction in Alzheimer’s risk.

The Tdap vaccine against tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis (whooping cough) is recommended for adults every 10 years, with vaccination among older adults often prompted by the birth of a grandchild, who cannot be fully vaccinated for months.

It was associated with a one-third decline in dementia.

Other researchers are investigating the effects of shingles vaccination on heart attacks and stroke, and of Covid-19 vaccination on cancer survival.

ALSO READ: Giving a boost to our elderly's immunity

Theories behind the benefits

What causes such vaccine bonuses?

Most hypotheses focus on the inflammation that arises when the immune system mobilises to fight off an infection.

“You have damage to the surrounding environment” in the body, “and that takes time to calm down”, Dr Chu says.

The effects of inflammation can far outlast the initial illness.

It may allow other infections to take hold, or cause heart attacks and strokes when clots form in narrowed blood vessels.

“If you prevent the infection, you prevent this other damage,” she says.

Hospitalisation itself, during which older patients can become deconditioned or develop delirium, is a risk factor for dementia, among other health problems.

Vaccines that reduce hospitalisation might therefore delay or ward off cognitive decline.

Health officials in the Trump administration have assailed childhood vaccines more than adult ones, but their vocal opposition may be contributing to inadequate vaccination among older Americans too.

Many will not only miss out on the emerging off-target benefits, but will also remain vulnerable to the diseases the vaccines prevent or diminish.

“The current national policy on vaccination is at best uncertain, and in instances appears anti- vaccine,” said Dr Schaffner, a former member of the US CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immuni-zation Practices.

“All of us in public health are very, very distressed.” – By Paula Span/KFF Health News/Tribune News Service

KFF Health News is a US national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programmes of KFF – the independent source for US health policy research, polling and journalism.

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Vaccination , shingles , RSV , flu , influenza , dementia , senior health

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