A recent report looked at whether Medicare beneficiaries in the United States received their routine vaccines during the COVID-19 pandemic. The report focused on the year 2020 and found that there was a decline in vaccine receipt among this group. The report did not provide specific numbers on how many fewer vaccines were given or compare the rate to years before the pandemic.
The report is observational, meaning it can only show a pattern or association. It cannot prove that the pandemic itself caused people to miss their vaccines. Other factors during that time could have played a role. The report also did not measure the size of the decline or break down which specific vaccines, like flu or pneumonia shots, were most affected.
No safety issues with the vaccines themselves were discussed in this report. The main reason to be careful is that this is a simple report of an observed trend. It lacks the detailed statistical analysis that would help us understand how big the problem was or why it happened.
Readers should take from this that disruptions in healthcare, like those seen during the pandemic, can potentially affect routine care like vaccinations. However, because the details are limited, this report mainly highlights an area for further investigation rather than providing definitive answers.