Vaccine rate drops among Older Australians for fatal infection (SBS Sinhalese / Reports)

Australia's Chief Medical Officer Brendan Murphy refutes claims the nation used a "cheap" vaccine.

Australia's Chief Medical Officer Brendan Murphy refutes claims the nation used a "cheap" vaccine. Source: AAP

A decline in pneumonia vaccination rates among older Australians has sparked an urgent plea for action by health professionals, who say the infection claims 2000 elderly lives each year.

While the pneumococcal pneumonia vaccination rate for children has climbed to 93 per cent, it has fallen below 50 per cent for equally vulnerable seniors, according to an article published in the Medical Journal of Australia on Monday.

The figure should be a "wake up call" for Australians aged 65 and over and their doctors, says article co-author Dr Rob Menzies, from UNSW's Vaccine and Infection Research Lab.

GPs should take further steps to promote the one-off vaccine, with the preventable infection responsible for more than 8000 hospitalisations each year among those aged over 65, says Dr Menzies, who has been backed by Lung Foundation Australia.

 

In addition to renewed health campaigns, Dr Menzies has called on governments to improve reporting for vaccination rates, with data scarce and often out-dated.

"Governments (need) to put systems in place to get the immunisation register functioning and supporting the pneumococcal vaccination program and produce regular data to see how we're going," he said.


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By Sanjaya Dissanayake
Source: SBS

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