Coronavirus

COVID-19 vaccines prevented 3,800 deaths among California seniors, HHS report says

Audrey Lindner, 87, gets the COVID-19 vaccine from CVS pharmacist Ernest Broome. The Lakes at Litchfield was one of the first senior care facilities in South Carolina to receive the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine on Monday. December 28, 2020.
Audrey Lindner, 87, gets the COVID-19 vaccine from CVS pharmacist Ernest Broome. The Lakes at Litchfield was one of the first senior care facilities in South Carolina to receive the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine on Monday. December 28, 2020.

A new government report has found that 22,000 California senior citizens were shielded from being infected with the coronavirus because they were vaccinated against COVID-19, 9,700 were saved from being hospitalized, and 3,800 avoided death.

The Department of Health and Human Services report, set to be released on Tuesday, found that California was the top state that benefited most in raw numbers from the vaccine shots.

Nationwide, the study found a reduction of 265,000 COVID-19 infections, 107,000 hospitalizations, and 39,000 deaths among vaccinated Medicare beneficiaries between January and May 2021.

Researchers at HHS came up with the projections by using a combination of Medicare claims and county-level vaccination data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Using mathematical models to compare what would have happened without vaccines, the researchers projected that infections, hospitalizations and death were lowered across the country.

The report also found reduced numbers of COVID-19 deaths, hospitalizations and infections across all racial and ethnic groups.

In a statement on the study, HHS said that seniors — who have been at highest risk of death from COVID-19 throughout the pandemic — have been shown to benefit from an overall high vaccination rate throughout the population, and not just within their age group.

“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,” HHS said. “The COVID-19 vaccines protect communities by reducing infections, deaths, and hospitalizations.”

This story was originally published October 4, 2021 at 3:44 PM.

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Michael Wilner
McClatchy DC
Michael Wilner is an award-winning journalist and was McClatchy’s chief Washington correspondent. Wilner joined the company in 2019 as a White House correspondent, and led coverage for its 30 newspapers of the federal response to the coronavirus pandemic, the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, and the Biden administration. Wilner was previously Washington bureau chief for The Jerusalem Post. He holds degrees from Claremont McKenna College and Columbia University and is a native of New York City.
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