Significance Annual influenza epidemics in the United States cause hundreds of thousands of hospitalizations . Quantifying vaccine impact is vital, yet many analyses overlook vaccines’ dual benefits : directly protecting recipients and indirectly protecting their contacts . Using a mathematical model that accounts for both effects, we estimate that vaccination prevented about 70,000 hospitalizations during the 2022–2023 season , with another 19,000 potentially avoidable if coverage met the 70% national target. Despite uncertainty in vaccine effectiveness against infection, our findings suggest that vaccinating younger adults offers substantial indirect protection for older adults. Tailoring annual vaccination campaigns by age group and state could further strengthen their public health impact. Abstract During the COVID-19 pandemic early years, infection prevention measures suppressed transmission of seasonal influenza and other respiratory viruses . The early onset and moderate s...
Media Monitoring for Signals about Emerging Threats