2-year survival among elderly hospitalised for acute respiratory infection versus hip fracture: a useful comparison to raise awareness

We read with great interest the article by Cillóniz et al. [1]. The authors nicely reported and discussed recent literature showing that pneumonia is a common lung infection that can be life-threatening, with particular concern for the elderly. Indeed, the annual incidences of hospitalisation for respiratory infections increase with age from 0.2% (for patients aged <75 years) to 1.9% (for age 80–84 years), 3.2% (for age 85–89 years) and 5.0% (for age ≥90 years) [2]. For the elderly, pneumonia has the greatest risk of death among the common causes of hospitalisation [3]. We do agree with the authors when they concluded that preventive interventions are of pivotal importance to improve outcomes and reduce the occurrence of adverse consequences [1]. However, we would like to emphasise that there is a mismatch between the high morbidity and mortality caused by respiratory infection and the low public awareness of this disease. A large pneumonia awareness survey involving over 9000 adults aged ≥50 years highlighted that most fail to accurately gauge their own pneumonia risk, leading to inadequate pneumonia prevention efforts including low uptake of existing vaccines [4]. The low public awareness of respiratory infection risk and severity in the elderly is a barrier to healthcare delivery and a driver of unhealthy ageing [5]. It is critical to raise awareness of this disease among the general public to improve the management of this largely preventable i...
Source: European Respiratory Review - Category: Respiratory Medicine Authors: Tags: Correspondence Source Type: research