New HHS Report: Vaccination Linked to
the Reduction of 13,000 COVID-19 Cases, 6,200 Hospitalizations, and
2,100 Deaths Among Seniors in Illinois
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[December 22, 2021]
A new report from the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) shows that COVID-19 vaccinations may have
helped prevent roughly 13,000 new COVID-19 infections and 2,100
deaths among seniors in Illinois during the first five months of
2021. The study, which was conducted by researchers with HHS’s
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE),
also found that nationally, vaccinations were linked to a reduction
of approximately 265,000 COVID-19 infections, 107,000
hospitalizations, and 39,000 deaths among Medicare beneficiaries
between January and May 2021.
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“This report reaffirms what we hear routinely from
states: COVID-19 vaccines save lives, prevent hospitalizations, and
reduce infection,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “The
Biden-Harris Administration has prioritized getting vaccines quickly
to pharmacies, nursing homes, doctors’ offices and even provided
increased reimbursement rates for at-home COVID-19 vaccinations, so
that seniors and others can easily get vaccinated.”
Today’s report reflects the devastating effect COVID-19 has had on
our vulnerable seniors and demonstrates that efforts to prioritize
and vaccinate this group directly correlate to saving lives. More
than 352,000 lives were lost during the first nine months of the
COVID-19 pandemic. Prior to the availability of vaccines, nearly 80
percent of these deaths were among people 65 and older who were also
Medicare eligible. For the period of January to May 2021, when
vaccination grew from one percent to 47 percent among adults 18 to
64 and from one percent to 80 percent among seniors, the study found
an 11-12 percent decrease in weekly COVID-19 hospitalizations and
deaths among Medicare beneficiaries for every 10 percent increase in
county vaccination rates.
All racial and ethnic groups and all 48 states analyzed experienced
reduced numbers of COVID-19 deaths, hospitalizations, and
infections, linked to vaccination rate increases. Texas and Hawaii
were excluded from this analysis due to data reporting limitations.
American Indian and Alaska Native Medicare beneficiaries saw the
largest vaccination-related percentage decrease in SARS-CoV-2
infections, hospitalizations, and deaths.
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The study also found that vaccines were linked to a
reduction of about 5,600 deaths among nursing home Medicare
beneficiaries, a group that was disproportionately impacted by the
pandemic.
Today’s report further underscores why it’s
critically important to get all eligible individuals living in the
United States vaccinated against COVID-19. The study found that high
vaccination rates for all adults were even more protective for
Medicare beneficiaries than just a high elderly vaccination rate on
its own. The COVID-19 vaccines protect communities by reducing
infections, deaths, and hospitalizations.
Recently, Secretary Becerra issued a directive, effective September
25, authorizing all CDC COVID-19 Vaccination Program providers to
make available and administer Pfizer-BioNTech booster doses to all
people who are eligible. This includes seniors over age 65. The
science has demonstrated this authorized booster can provide added
protection to seniors. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services also issued a reminder to Medicare beneficiaries that all
COVID-19 vaccines, including the authorized booster will be covered
without cost-sharing.
To find the ASPE report, visit: https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/covid-19-vaccination-rates-outcomes.
[U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services] |