On Parenting

No Luck Finding an H1N1 Flu Shot? You’re Not Alone

By Nancy Shute

Posted: November 6, 2009

If you've been frustrated in trying to get your kids vaccinated against H1N1 flu, you're not alone: Two thirds of parents who have sought vaccine for their children have failed to find it, according to a Harvard School of Public Health survey out today. That's no small deal, because 41 percent of the parents polled said they have tried to get their children vaccinated against swine flu. Hearing that big Wall Street firms Goldman Sachs and Citigroup got H1N1 vaccine doesn't do much to reassure worried parents that the system is directing vaccine to the kids who need it the most. Although almost 36 million doses of H1N1 vaccine have been distributed, many parents are still anxiously waiting.

My area is typical. At present there's no H1N1 vaccine to be found through the county health department, and school clinics have been canceled for lack of vaccine. I was able to get FluMist for my child at a county clinic in mid-October, even though she doesn't have asthma or other chronic health problems that would have put her at greater risk of complications. All children and young adults from 6 months old to 24 years are a priority group for H1N1 vaccine because they have little or no immunity to this flu virus. But in hindsight, I wish the county had been stricter with those first vaccine clinics and restricted them only to pregnant women and children who are at greater risk than mine.

The flap over Wall Streeters getting H1N1 vaccine may have speeded up that process. Even though Goldman Sachs just got 200 doses of vaccine for employees in high-risk groups and Citigroup got 1,200, the sense that Wall Street fat cats got vaccine while children go without hasn't gone unnoticed. Thomas Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, sent out a letter yesterday reminding vaccine distributors to get H1N1 vaccines to high-risk groups first. "I ask each of you to review your plans immediately and work to ensure that the maximum number of doses is delivered to those at greatest risk as rapidly as possible," he said.

That would be nice. Half of people trying to find out where and when they could get H1N1 vaccine weren't able to, according to the Harvard survey. Puh-leez, public health folks! You've been training for pandemic vaccine distribution for years. The least you can do is let us know, in real time, where the vaccine is and how we can get it.

If you're seeking H1N1 vaccine, here are four strategies to make the vaccine search simpler:

1. Check your county health department's website and call the county flu hotline. My county health department updates its H1N1 vaccine availability site often, and a live person answers the phone when you call. Some, like Fairfax County, Va., even let you follow the H1N1 vaccine supply with the county's RSS, Twitter, and Facebook feeds. The federal government's flu.gov site can point you to state and county health department websites.

2. See if your local school system is offering vaccine clinics. Many have been canceled for lack of supply, but they'll get cranked up again as stocks increase later in November. Look for a dedicated Web page or hotline number for updates.

3. Become the new best friend of the receptionist in your pediatrician's office. These people have had a rough few weeks, besieged both by parents trying to get H1N1 vaccine and kids sick with the usual strep throat and earaches. They deserve some love. And since pediatricians will be getting more vaccine in the weeks to come, you need to stay in touch. Ask if the office is keeping a list of high-priority patients so you don't have to keep calling.

4. Shop around. Vaccine distribution is spotty, and you might strike gold at the health department in a nearby county. While Montgomery County, Md., where I live, is currently offering vaccine only to pregnant women, Fairfax County, Va., just across the Potomac River, is holding an H1N1 vaccine clinic for children on Saturday to hand out 12,000 doses. Walk-in pharmacy clinics and large medical practices also may have vaccine when your doctor does not.

If you've had luck finding H1N1 flu vaccine, please share your success in the comments! Your strategy could help other parents whose kids really need the vaccine or spare others hours waiting in line.

live vaccine

The very first shipment of vaccine was live, intranasal vaccine only due to a short delay in the shipment of the killed, injectable form. The live vaccine may only be given to healthy people age 2-49, NOT to pregnant women or people with chronic medical illnesses. While this unfortunately eliminated some high-risk people from receiveing the vaccine during that first week, it was completely reasonable to go ahead and start giving the live vaccine to those in the priority groups that could receive it- healthy chidren, healthcare workers, and caregivers of infants too young to receive the vaccine. Your county health department should be commended, not criticized, for getting this vaccine out in a timely manner to people who were able to receive it.

AA of OH @ Nov 23, 2009 12:21:30 PM

H1N1 - Another Alternative

Dear Ms. Shute,

In your article on Nov 6th "No Luck Finding an H1N1 Flu Shot?... You made a reference that children and young adults between the ages of 6 and 24 years of age, have little or no immunity to this flu.

Are you aware that part of the reason is due to the lack of Vitamin D3 in most people, including children and young adults. Quote, "Vitamin D deficiency is so widespread in U.S. children that it poses a huge threat to the future health of an entire generation. A new study published in the journalPediatrics paints a disturbing picture of vitamin D deficiency across the population of children aged 1 through 21."

Ms. Shute, Vitamin D is essential for healthy, active immune function. That's just one of the reasons more and more people are choosing vitamin D instead of the swine flu vaccine. Below are nineteen more reasons:

#1 Vitamin D activates your immune system to respond to any viral exposure (not just one virus).

#2 Vitamin D naturally belongs in your body.

#3 Vitamin D has been functioning as medicine in the human body since the beginning of the human species.

#4 Vitamin D is available right now and there's no shortage of it.

#5 Vitamin D won't cause your brain to swell and put you into a coma.

#6 Vitamin D doesn't require an injection with a scary needle.

#7 Vitamin D is found naturally in many foods such as sardines or salmon.

#8 Vitamin D has a perfect safety record. No one ever died from consuming it.

#9 Vitamin D is affordable. You can even get it for free (from sunlight).

#10 Vitamin D doesn't contain viral fragments from diseased animals (like vaccines often do).

#11 Vitamin D doesn't contain Thimerosal (Thimerosal contains 49.6 percent mercury by weight and is metabolized or degraded into ethylmercury and thiosalicylate. Mercury, or more precisely, ethylmercury, is the principle agent that kills contaminants. Unfortunately, mercury also kills much more than that.) Recorded studies have link Thimersol to Autism. So why would any parent subject their child to this? Plus 60% of parents are against giving their children the H1N1 shot.

#12 Vitamin D doesn't need a warning sheet describing possible side effects.

#13 Vitamin D doesn't hurt your arm when you take it.

#14 Vitamin D also improves sugar metabolism, bone density and healthy moods.

#15 Vitamin D is safe for the environment.

#16 Vitamin D doesn't contain squalene or other inflammatory adjuvant chemicals.

#17 Vitamin D works on everyone and is safe for everyone, including infants and children.

#18 Vitamin D is made in nature, not a laboratory.

#19 Vitamin D is found naturally in breast milk.

#20 You can walk, and chew gum, and generate vitamin D from sunshine all at the same time!

It would of been refreshing to have a leading news publisher state some factual organic alternatives in fighting the H1N1. But, in reality that can never happen, since BigPharma spends a lot of advertising dollars off & online to the media. And that vitamin D3 is free and or very inexpensive if bought. Which means BigPharma loses billions of dollars in revenue.

What are thoughts?

Christian of CA @ Nov 16, 2009 23:03:59 PM

No Luck Finding an H1N1 Flu Shot? You’re Not Alone

Swine flu?

I am still trying to work on the last (2) flu's:

a)Bird Flu.

b)West Nile Virus.

Geez louise, can you give guy a break, man....

I propose to the medical(fiction) writers that the next thing they come up with be called Ignoramous Syndrome, to which it would be a disease lacking of any common sense.

Peace.

Greg of IL @ Nov 12, 2009 16:04:55 PM

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On Parenting

On Parenting

Parenting may be an art, but there's a lot of science behind raising healthy, thriving children. Contributing Editor Nancy Shute explores the latest discoveries and developments affecting children's health and parenting. Send her your comments and questions at onparenting@usnews.com.

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