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Health boss warns that swine flu "is likely" to return


A HEALTH boss says swine flu is “likely” to come back next year and could be far more dangerous than before.

Figures also show pregnant women and young children in Worcestershire, two of the groups most at risk from the flu, were less keen to have the vaccine than over 65s.

Dr Richard Harling, director of public health for NHS Worcestershire, said in a report delivered to a board meeting: “There is a high likelihood that the swine flu virus will re-emerge during the 2010/11 flu season. The situation remains uncertain and the virus may re-emerge before the usual flu season and/or mutate into a more dangerous form.

“It is now clear that deaths caused by swine flu overall have been lower than in previous pandemics and in some flu seasons.

“However, the disease has disproportionately affected young people, and this is where most deaths have occurred, particularly in those with pre-existing chronic illness.”

Take-up was low among pregnant women with only 14.9 per cent (572 women) of the 3,836 who were eligible having the vaccine.

Of the 18,732 under-fives not in a flu clinical risk group, 22.9 per cent (4,290 children) were vaccinated.

Of the 35,452 over 65s eligible for the vaccine, 41.6 per cent (14,748 people) had the vaccine.

The take-up was 36.2 per cent (14,566 people) among the 40,237 under 65s who were deemed vulnerable enough to be eligible for the vaccine.

The vaccines started arriving last October for frontline NHS staff and were delivered to GP surgeries across the county shortly afterwards.

Dr Harling said: “The greatest challenge is in convincing pregnant women of the need to have the vaccine.”

Tony Hadfield, a non-executive director, said at the meeting said he was “disappointed” at the low level of take-up of the vaccine among health service staff.

Among NHS Worcestershire staff, the jab has been given to 17.8 per cent of the 146 eligible doctors, 25.7 per cent of the 1,041 eligible nurses, 33.6 per cent of 420 clinical staff and 45.7 per cent of the 806 support staff.

The take-up was 41.8 per cent of the 376 eligible GPs and 26.5 per cent of the 260 nurses working at county GP surgeries.

In all cases take up of the swine flu vaccine was higher than the take up of the seasonal flu vaccine.

Dr Harling said: “The take up is broadly similar to elsewhere. I think the general lesson is that healthcare staff don’t like needles very much.”

Eighteen out of 60 GP surgeries in the county opted out of providing swine flu vaccines to housebound patients but NHS Worcestershire has since offered immunisation to all these patients, administering about 500 vaccines.

One GP practice, which has not been named by NHS Worcestershire, also opted out of immunising under fives, forcing NHS Worcestershire to set up extra clinics for these patients.

Flu activity nationally and in Worcestershire remains low. The National Pandemic Flu Service, which provided a dedicated website and call centres to tell patients if they had swine flu, closed in February.

Comments(2)

TriedAndTested says...
6:26pm Fri 19 Mar 10

How many extra beds will trust provide at each hospital?

There is already a bed shortfall that needs to be addressed.

bettysenior says...
9:35pm Sun 21 Mar 10

The fallacy that the Drugs Strategy will save us from a Pandemic

The facts are,

Detection
Time Scale - 0 months
Swine Flu first detected – Influenza A, Novel H1N1 "swine flu" was first detected in Mexico City and was made public March 18, 2009. Therefore the first causality was probably at the beginning of march 2009 taking into account the incubation period.

First Death in USA
Time Scale + 2-months later
at the end of April 2009

1st Vaccine Approved
Time Scale + 6 months 2 weeks
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the new swine flu vaccine for use in the United States on September 15, 2009.

Vaccine 1st ready for use in USA
Time Scale + 7 months 1 week
The vaccine was first ready from mass production and used on 5th October 2009 in the USA

Most Vaccinated City in the USA by 22nd March 2010
Time Scale + 1 year 1month 1 week
Massachusetts vaccinated more residents against the swine flu and seasonal flu in the fall and winter than any other state.
Up to the end of Winter (March 2010) - The Massachusetts Department of Public Health says 36 percent of residents were inoculated against the swine flu, also known as H1N1, compared with 21 percent nationally. Seasonal flu vaccinations were administered to 57 percent of the population, compared with 37 percent nationwide.
A mere 36% in one USA city and where nationally only 21% had the vaccine by March 22nd 2010.

The Spanish flu of 1917/18 did its worst between week 16 and week 26. Up to 100 million died.

Considering this fact by the time we get any vaccine, most of us will be well dead. Fact not fiction. Therefore the vaccine strategy is totally flawed and we have to move from this stupid strategy to a standpoint of never letting it happen in the first place – the preventative strategy not cure strategy and the only strategy that will actually work.

That strategy is - http://avian-influen
za.cirad.fr/content/
download/1931/11789/
file/Kennedy-F-Short
ridge.pdf


Worcestershire woman confirmed with Swine Flu Health boss warns that swine flu "is likely" to return

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