Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Elderly man getting a vaccination
Elderly man getting a vaccination - Credit: Milkos / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Health
RIVM
whooping cough
measles
vaccination program
elderly
immunologist
Ministry of Public Health Welfare and Sports
Debbie van Baarle
Dimitri Diavatopoulos
Friday, 3 May 2024 - 08:00

Share this article:

Immunologists want measles, whooping cough vaccine program for older adults

The rise of whooping cough and measles infections has a lot of attention focused on vaccinating young children. But older adults are also very vulnerable. Immunologists, therefore, advocate for a national vaccination program for the elderly, EenVandaag reports.

Earlier this week, the RIVM reported that there were 7,187 whooping cough infections in the Netherlands in the first four months of this year. It also reported 74 measles diagnoses. These diseases are highly infectious and can be extremely dangerous for young children and the elderly.

“The immune system decreases due to aging, which makes the elderly vulnerable,” Debbie van Baarle, an immunologist at the RIVM and professor of Immunology of Vaccinations at the University of Groningen, told the program. “And because the elderly are more vulnerable to infectious diseases, they need extra support to protect them. That can be done through vaccination.”

Dimitri Diavatopoulos, an immunologist at Radboudumc, is also in favor of vaccination for older adults. “If you can protect the elderly by offering a vaccine, then I think it will have a lot of direct health benefits for those people because the burden of disease will be reduced among this group.”

Many elderly people were vaccinated against whooping cough as children. But bacteria change and it is unlikely that a vaccination decades ago will still offer sufficient protection. Several countries, including Austria and Australia, offer the elderly a repeat vaccination every 10 years. Van Baarle thinks that’s a good start for the Netherlands.

But the two immunologists would prefer a full vaccination program for the elderly, covering measles, whooping cough, flu, shingles, pneumococcal disease, and the RS virus. “I am certainly in favor of that. I think that the risk of infectious diseases does not stop at the age of 18,” Van Baarle said. “We should actually work towards a life-course vaccination, where you can use multiple vaccines over your entire life so that everyone is optimally protected.”

A national vaccination program would also simplify things, Diavatopoulos said. Older adults currently go to the GP for some vaccines and the GGD for others. “It is too fragmented. I am in favor of a vaccination program for the elderly because it can be much better organized.” Then, people can go to one place to get all the vaccines they need.

The Ministry of Public Health, Welfare, and Sports told EenVandaag that the RIVM recently carried out an implementation test into a vaccination facility for adults at the GGD municipal health services. “It is in the final stages of completion. Parliament will be informed further about this in the short term,” the Ministry said.

More like this

Image
Pediatricians preparing to vaccinate a baby
Baby vaccination rate down to decades-low point below 90 percent
Image
Doctor vaccinating a baby girl
Gov't pushing better local information on vaccines after measles outbreaks
Image
Doctor administering a vaccine to a child
Kids to get measles jab earlier, tetanus shot later in updated vaccination program
Image
University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG)
Needless suffering: Dutch pediatricians urge vaccination after whooping cough deaths
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Football coach jailed for secretly filming over 500 boys in changing rooms
  • Illegal cigarettes, snus widely available in Rotterdam convenience stores
  • State Secretary: action will be taken if Ye makes criminal remarks on stage
  • U.S. Embassy: Dutch World Cup fans can face long passport lines, social media checks
  • From Champions League surprise to relegation: Why Ajax chose Míchel as new manager

Top stories

  • Football coach jailed for secretly filming over 500 boys in changing rooms
  • U.S. Embassy: Dutch World Cup fans can face long passport lines, social media checks
  • Tata Steel drops new Sustainability Chief Pols over pro-apartheid past in South Africa
  • Waiting times of a year or longer at some Dutch hospitals as doctor shortage grows
  • Video: One killed, two hurt in stabbing at Heerhugowaard business

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content