A recent study of more than 280,000 people in Wales found the live-attenuated varicella zoster virus vaccine (Zostavax) reduced their risk of a new dementia diagnosis by 20% over a seven-year period.
Published in Nature, the study is based on adults born between September 1925 and September 1942 who are registered with a primary healthcare provider (more than 98% of adults in Wales) and who had no dementia diagnosis at the start of the vaccine programme.
Taking advantage of the unique way the shingles immunisation programme was rolled out in Wales in 2013 and examining other sources of bias, authors said the study provides evidence that is more likely to be causal than the existing, exclusively associational, evidence on this topic.







