#VaccinesForLife: Lighting up our future
Investing in adult vaccination programmes can help protect lives, our healthcare systems, and our economies. To find out more, read the new report by the Office of Health Economics and discover why adult vaccination programmes are a highly effective investment for governments and health services.
Overview
This “first-of-its kind” report by the Office of Health Economics, an independent health economics research organisation, investigates the health and socio-economic benefits of adult vaccination programmes.
The report focuses on vaccines for influenza, pneumococcal disease, herpes zoster, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) across 10 countries representing a range of healthcare systems, demographics, and vaccine schedules (Australia, Brazil, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Poland, South Africa, Thailand, and the United States).
Read the report
This new report looks at four adult vaccines across ten countries where they are available to determine the wider economic and social impact.
Adult vaccination can, on average, return up to 19 times the amount spent through health and wider socio-economic benefits
This 19x return is equivalent to billions of dollars in net monetary benefits to society, up to USD 4,637 per every individual full vaccination course
Preventable diseases cost G20 economies USD 1 trillion in annual productivity loss among those aged 50 to 64 years
What is the impact of adult immunisation programmes?
The report indicates that adult immunisation programmes offset their costs multiple times through benefits to population health, the healthcare systems, and wider society. Adult vaccination programmes can return up to 19 times their initial investment.
The report also uncovers gaps in evidence regarding the broader value of immunisation programmes. This means the positive returns are likely to be underestimated.
The data demonstrates that adult immunisation can deliver socio-economic returns proportional to childhood immunisation programmes. Despite this, access to adult vaccination is globally inconsistent, with limited inclusion in routine immunisation schedules.
The findings highlight the opportunity to ease pressures on health services by adopting a prevention-first mindset that includes adult immunisation programmes.
Global demographic transitions and health challenges
The world is currently undergoing significant demographic shifts with ageing populations. By 2050, the number of adults over 60 is expected to double.
While chronic diseases are taking a greater toll than ever, preventable infectious diseases — including flu, pneumococcal diseases, herpes zoster, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) — still have an enormous burden on societies and place immense pressure on healthcare systems that are also grappling with the growing challenges of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and other pandemic threats.
With unprecedented and growing demand for healthcare, prevention must be at the heart of our response.
Expand and develop the evidence base for the value of adult immunisation programmes
There are significant gaps in evidence regarding the broader elements of the value of immunisation programmes. Further research is needed to close these knowledge gaps, which is vital for informed decision-making.
More robust data collection systems, widely accepted methods, and transparent/open data access would allow more accurate quantification of these values. It is especially important to close these information gaps in middle- and lower-income countries.
Vaccines, lighting up our future
Call to action
We call on policy- and decision-makers to adopt a prevention-first mindset, implement and optimise robust adult immunisation programmes that are proven cost-effective, and expand the evidence base for the broader value of adult immunisation.