The respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine has reduced the risk of hospital admission from RSV infection by 82% among adults aged 75 to 79.

The figure comes from the inaugural RSV annual report, published by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), following the first year of NHS RSV vaccination programmes.

For newborns, maternal vaccination cut the risk of RSV-related hospitalisation by 72% when given at least 14 days before delivery, according to a companion study published by The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.

The programmes, added to the NHS vaccination schedule in September 2024, include routine vaccination at age 75 with a catch-up programme for adults aged 75-79, and maternal vaccination offered from 28 weeks of pregnancy.

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The research was conducted in partnership with Nottingham University Hospitals and other NHS trusts, with data drawn from surveillance across 300 GP practices and hospital emergency departments.

Uptake among eligible adults climbed during the programme's first year, reaching 62.9% by end-June, up from 60.3% in March, according to new data from UKHSA this week.

Among women giving birth in March, 54.7% had received the RSV vaccine, though uptake ranged from 73.3% in Chinese ethnic groups to just 26.4% among Black and Black British Caribbean women.

Dr Conall Watson, immunisation consultant at UKHSA, said: ‘The evidence clearly shows the RSV vaccine for pregnant women is highly effective and will give much reassurance to parents, knowing their newborn is protected from birth, when they are at much greater risk from RSV.’

RSV activity in the 2024/25 season started in mid-October, peaked in late November and early December (weeks 47 to 49), and declined to baseline by late February.

Peak RSV positivity rates reached 53.1% in children under five. Among adults aged 75 and over, positivity peaked at 18.5% in early December.

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In April, NHS England announced that up to 200 additional pharmacies would be able to offer the RSV immunisation programme during 2025/26 – on top of the around 40 community pharmacy sites that currently offer the national programme.

It was recently announced that nirsevimab, a long-lasting injection protecting at-risk infants from RSV, will be rolled out for the first time from late September.

However, NHS England confirmed there were no current plans to make it available in pharmacies or GP practices.

Henry Gregg, chief executive of the National Pharmacy Association, recently spoke of the potential for community pharmacy to play a greater role in tackling respiratory illness.

Gregg, who was formerly director of external affairs at Asthma + Lung UK, said: ‘When I was working in respiratory, we pushed hard for the rollout of RSV vaccinations through community pharmacy.

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‘Vaccinations are definitely an area where pharmacy could deliver more,’ he added.