United States is short 55 million swine flu vaccine doses

WASHINGTON, Oct 27 (AFP) – The United States will face a swine flu vaccine shortfall of 45 to 55 million doses by the end of the year but half of the population could still be vaccinated, a senior US official said Monday.

“I don’t think we will get to the original goal” of 195 million influenza A(H1N1) vaccine doses delivered during the US government’s fall vaccination campaign, said Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

But he tempered that the government may obtain 140 to 150 million doses, “which quite frankly I think will likely be enough because we don’t anticipate more than half of the people want to get vaccinated.

“If we get to 150 million, we will likely have as much as anybody needs,” Fauci told AFP.

As of Friday, 16.1 million doses of swine flu vaccine were ready for shipping, and over 11 million doses had been sent out to state health authorities.

Health Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has already warned that demand is outstripping supply of vaccine for the novel flu strain, as 46 of the 50 states now report widespread A(H1N1) activity at an unusually early time of the year.

“What we have seen in the US is a significant dichotomy or gap between the demand and the supply,” warned Fauci.

President Barack Obama has declared a national emergency for doctors and nurses to better deal with the rapid spread of the virus that has infected millions and killed over 1,000 people in the country.

But Fauci insisted the vaccine shortage would not change Washington’s promise to donate 10 percent of its doses to the World Health Organization for distribution to the poorest countries.

“That pledge is still valid but we have to think to make sure that we get the most vulnerable in our population taken care of before the release of 10 percent of our vaccines,” he said.

Fauci explained that manufacturers are facing difficulties delivering as much vaccine as expected because of the lengthy amount of time needed to grow the virus in chicken eggs for vaccine compared to seasonal flu strains.

“Unfortunately for everyone — not only in the US but around the world — this is a very slow-growing virus,” he added.

“Once it grows, it makes a very good vaccine that is quite effective and safe. But the projected dosage we thought that we would have by this time of the fall is far less that we had anticipated.”

At least 4,999 people have died from swine flu infections worldwide since April, when an outbreak was first reported in Mexico before rapidly spreading to the United States, according to the World Health Organization. (AFP)

Delivery of swine flu vaccines has been delayed…

WASHINGTON – Delivery of some swine flu vaccines has been delayed because companies cannot make it as fast as they had hoped, just as the virus has really started to spread, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Friday.

The CDC’s Dr. Anne Schuchat said that while 40 million doses had been anticipated for the end of October, only about 28 to 30 million doses would be available.

“Yields for vaccine are lower than would be hoped,” Schuchat said in a telephone briefing. “We unfortunately won’t have as much at the end of this month as we had hoped to.”

She also said deaths from H1N1 swine flu were above the epidemic threshold in some U.S. cities and states. H1N1 flu activity was widespread in 41 states, she said. ...Read the entire article...

76 children dead from swine flu since April in the United States...

Underscoring the threat that the H1N1 swine flu poses to children, U.S. health officials said Friday that 76 children have died from the disease since it appeared in April, including 19 in the past week alone.

Over the last three years, deaths among children from the regular seasonal flu ranged from 46 to 88, Dr. Anne Schuchat, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said during an afternoon press conference.

“So we have already had 76 children dying from the 2009 H1N1 virus, and it’s only the beginning of October,” she said. “We are seeing more illness, more hospitalizations and more deaths each week from the flu. Virtually all the virus circulating right now is the H1N1 2009 virus.” ...Read the entire article...

Two thirds of swine flu deaths in Canada are younger women.

More than two-thirds of those who have fallen critically ill and died of H1N1 influenza in Canada are younger women, according to a startling new study that underscores that while the pandemic flu is mild overall, in selective cases it is brutal and lethal.

The research, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, highlights that there are two distinct forms of the disease: In 99 per cent of cases, people get sick, stay home for a few days, and get better. But in about one in every 1,000 cases, patients become gravely ill and require staggering amounts of care. ...Read the entire article...

Protect yourself from the deadly swine flu


These products are hand selected to help you survive this deadly flu season:
...Read the entire article...