Indirect vaccine effects (i.e., herd effects) have reduced pneumococcal infections among unvaccinated persons of all ages, including those aged ≥65 years, since introduction of the routine infant 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7) immunization program in 2000.4 Data from Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs)* indicate that, by 2007, the overall incidence rate of IPD among persons of all ages had decreased by 45% (from 24.4. to 13.5 per 100,000 population), compared with 1998-1999 before PCV7 was introduced.4 Among persons aged 18-49 years, 50-64 years, and ≥65 years, rates of IPD decreased 40%, 18%, and 37%, respectively. The decreases resulted from reductions of 87% to 92% in cases of infection with serotypes covered in PCV7.4 Despite the major direct and indirect PCV7 effects, IPD remains an important cause of illness and death. An estimated 43,500 cases and 5,000 deaths occurred among persons of all ages in 2009; approximately 84% of IPD cases and nearly all deaths occurred in adults.1