CDC Urges Patience As More Swine Flu Shots Arrive

Total should near 42 million by week's end; more health-care workers getting vaccine

Posted: November 3, 2009

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, Nov. 3 (HealthDay News) -- The United States has 31.8 million H1N1 flu vaccine doses available and is on track to have another 10 million ready by week's end, a federal health official said Tuesday.

So far, that isn't enough to prevent long lines at vaccination centers, but it is consistent with what officials had projected earlier this week.

"We're having a steady increase in the availability of vaccine, but not nearly as rapidly as we would have liked," Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told reporters during an afternoon teleconference. "That is encouraging, but it is not nearly as much as we would like. We realize it is frustrating and inconvenient [to patients and to physicians]. As public health professionals, it is frustrating because, in part, many people who seek the vaccine will not get vaccinated later. They might not come back. We ask people to continue to be persistent."

In response to a report that 6,000 flu shots had to be discarded in Pennsylvania because they weren't stored at the proper temperature, Freiden said, "We regret it when there's any loss of vaccine, but when you think that we now have 30 million doses out there, and we've only had a few examples of improper handling that led to the vaccines having to be discarded, this type of thing is virtually inevitable and we're glad it's been relatively rare."

Officials also reported that more health-care workers than usual are availing themselves of the seasonal flu vaccine.

"We're seeing a higher uptake of the seasonal influenza vaccine by health care workers than in previous years," said Frieden. "We'll have to wait and see how that goes and how extensive it is."

Demand for the regular, seasonal flu vaccine among the general population has also been unprecedented, Frieden added, with 90 million doses already distributed to providers and 114 million expected to be available through the market by year's end.

However, virtually all of the flu being diagnosed right now is H1N1.

"We're seeing almost no seasonal flu," Frieden said. That doesn't mean the seasonal flu shot won't be needed, however. "What the rest of the season holds, only time will tell," the CDC director said.

Frieden also reiterated the importance of antiviral medications, such as Tamiflu or Relenza, regardless of whether the vaccine is available. That's especially true for people with certain medical troubles, he said.

"For people with asthma and other underlying conditions, it's particularly important to get vaccinated when the vaccine becomes available," he said. "If you have fever and cough, get treated promptly. People with asthma account for about one-third of all people hospitalized with H1N1. We know that only half of people with asthma, when they get sick with flu, sought care from a medical provider. If you have asthma or other underlying conditions, seek care promptly."

As always for everyone, the message of the season is wash your hands frequently, cover your mouth when sneezing or coughing, and stay home if you are sick.

"The flu season lasts till May, and this flu season is unlike any other for at least 50 years," Frieden said. "We don't know what will happen, but we will continue to monitor and do everything we can to prevent or reduce the spread of flu."

More information

There's more on H1N1 influenza at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

CDC

Can anybody who has been following events over the last decade (SARS, anthtrax, H1N1) have any confidence in the CDC?

They seem to be absolute idiots, behind the 8-ball at every turn. I say, we should save the tax dollars and disband the CDC as an ineffective group of clowns!

Dan of GA @ Nov 03, 2009 19:48:20 PM

We've Run Out of Vaccine?

This stating there is a shortage of H1N1 vaccine is a con-game to make it look like a shortage, so that they'll get line ups and sleeves rolled up 10 blocks down the street! Another psychological mind game! Watch and see!

http://www.infowars.com/msnbc-hard-sell-propaganda-for-h1n1-soft-kill-vaccination/

Dr. Nancy Snyderman, billed as chief medical editor at NBC News, says when the HHS bureaucrat Kathleen Sebelius speaks, we have to listen. Snyderman tells the talking heads on MSNBC that we should all line up and take our eugenics soft kill H1N1 vaccine. Sebelius is a member of the globalist Bilderberg Group. Bilderberg advocates modern eugenics and plans to eventually reduce the world’s population by 80%, as called for by the 1974 UN Assessment on Biodiversity.

The H1N1 virus is a big deal, Snyderman pontificates, and it will “cut a swath” through the population. Distrust of the government and big pharma, she warns, may be fatal. “I can’t tell you what to do,” she adds, “but I can tell you what you should do, and what you should do is get this vaccination.”

There is the small matter that this virus outbreak is far less deadly than the normal seasonal flu, but that does not stop the editor from claiming that if you don’t get the vaccination you are playing Russian roulette.

Anchor Dylan Ratigan tells us to stop being lazy and frightened and get off our “derrieres” and get this vaccination. This is par for the course as the corporate media, in particular MSNBC, is a branch office of the CIA under Operation Mockingbird. The CIA was created by Wall Street and works in the service of the banksters and the global elite who have made no bones that they want to cull the herd and get world population down to around 500 million. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VebOTc-7shU

Paul Revere of TX @ Nov 03, 2009 19:40:32 PM

FLU

I don't have health insurance and I am on unemployment, I am a diabetic> I'm really worried about this Swine flu, plus I'm worried about the side affects. Then there the longest lines here and all the people like 5 hours wait. Please advise me on some good news.

mary rincon of CA @ Nov 03, 2009 18:01:27 PM

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