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Nationwide Shortage In Supply of Swine Flu Vaccine

Hugh Pickens writes "The NY Times reports that as the number of swine flu cases grows to levels unprecedented for this time of year, health officials predict a shortfall in the supply of swine flu vaccine. Forty-three children have died from swine flu since August 30 — about the same number that usually die in an entire flu season.' These are very sobering statistics,' says Dr. Anne Schuchat, the director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, 'and unfortunately they are likely to increase.' Projections of the supply of swine flu vaccine have widely varied. During the summer, health officials said 120 million doses would be ready in October but later dropped the estimate to 40 million doses. Now officials expect only 28 million to 30 million doses, adding that the exact number is impossible to predict and could change daily as vaccine manufacturers report that production was behind schedule. 'Vaccine production for influenza is pretty complex,' says Schuchat explaining the delay, 'and the complex process this year is taking a bit longer than we had hoped.' Schuchat warned parents with sick children to be alert for signs that medical attention is required including not eating well, difficulties breathing, and turning blue or gray. A particularly important sign is when children start to get better, then have a relapse, usually a sign that pneumonia is developing, and immediate treatment should be sought."

9 of 579 comments (clear)

  1. Do not want by flghtmstr1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Based on what I've heard from people who actually had the swine flu, I'd rather have the disease than the vaccine.

    1. Re:Do not want by Sj0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I really don't know why you're being modded down.

      Vaccines for diseases with high mortality rates makes sense. Vaccines for the seasonal flu is fixing what ain't broke, which always introduces risk.

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      It's been a long time.
    2. Re:Do not want by Firethorn · · Score: 4, Interesting

      1. Your girlfriend got lucky, at least a little. One of my coworkers wasn't so lucky. She died from H1N1, and it wasn't pretty. One could argue that it takes bad luck(and pre-existing conditions) to die from the flu, most cases aren't bad, but even if the death rate was .1%, that's still 100 dead out of 100k infections.
      2. Being in the hospital predisposes you to see the bad effects. Kinda like how if you work in a prison you'll see more criminals.
      3. Vaccines aren't a cure. If you view viruses like terrorists(who all share a family resemblence), a vaccine is like distributing a rap/identification sheet. Your immune system still has to respond to fight the infection, it just gets a leg up. Against a replicating 'enemy', said leg up can be the difference between life and death.

      You might have an arguement about the antibiotics, but that's a 'too late, open another front in the war' - the immune system has already been roused.

      If anything, antibacterial soap and sanitizing cleaning products would make a better target. But even then, how much is it our immune systems 'getting lazy' and how much is 'people with weak immune systems aren't dying early'?

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      I don't read AC A human right
    3. Re:Do not want by UnrealisticWhample · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I had to get both hepatitis and tuberculosis vaccinations back when I was working as a caretaker for developmentally disabled people back in Illinois. I have no idea whether that was a company or a state regulation, but I know it was mandatory as part of the job.

  2. 43 healthy children? Or 43 total children? by BobMcD · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It makes a difference. All forms of influenza are devastating to an ill child. We must assume that some ill children have been exposed to H1N1 by now. So, which is the case:

    1) All 43 were ill

    2) None of th 43 were ill

    3) Some portion of the 43 were ill

    Also bear in mind that this is only about twice (possibly trending towards three times) as deadly as using school-buses:

    "Approximately 27 school aged children die in school bus accidents every year." http://www.onlinelawyersource.com/personal_injury/bus/statistics.html

    The 1918 pandemic was certainly something that we do not wish to see repeated. However, it was deadlier than this situation on the order of millions of times more.

    Please stop scaring people. Please?

  3. Re:False Statements by nedlohs · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Your statement is blatantly false. As the most minor of checks would show you.

    Children don't due from flu in the hundreds each year.

    So show us your stats source, or did you just make it up because you are an uninformed idiot?

  4. Re:Same News Cycle Every Year by techess · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Instead of doing a flu shot a few years back I got a pneumonia vaccine. Usually it is the pneumonia that kills you when you get the flu. It doesn't protect you against all forms of pneumonia, but as an added side affect if I get hospitalized for some other reason my chance of getting a secondary pneumonia infection is reduced.

    The other bonus is you get one or two shots in your lifetime instead of having to get a shot every year. I guess I'm a bit more trusting of a vaccine that doesn't seem to revolve around a yearly profit cycle.

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    Don't anthropomorphize computers. They *hate* that.
  5. Don't be an ass. by John+Hasler · · Score: 2, Interesting

    First, government is responsible: the CDC is in charge of this operation.

    Second, A deliberate decision was made to ship the stuff as fast as it was made rather than stockpiling it and coordinating distribution in order to get it out as fast as possible. It was expected that this would result in "shortages and lines". Better that than everybody waiting another month.

    Third, given the leadtime they had (controlled by the virus, not the humans) they have done a remarkable job getting a significant amount of vaccine out this early at all.

    I say this despite being a definite non-fan of government. I'm sure a truly free society (there are none) could do as well or better, but we have to work with what we have.

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    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  6. Not fear of death, it's not wanting to get sick by thesandtiger · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm not getting a flu shot because I think I'm going to die from it...

    I'm getting a flu shot because I don't want to be sick as a dog from this thing and miss a week of work.

    The $30 I spend (via insurance) on a flu shot every year pays for itself in that I'm not freaking the fuck out about catching up on work, not having to spend time I'm not at work laying in bed feeling miserable, and not having to shell out $15 a box (and show my ID thanks to meth makers) for pills that'll make me feel slightly less miserable.

    I used to not get flu shots, and I got sick as a dog at least once a winter with whatever was going around. I now get flu shots and for the last 3 winters I haven't been sick with anything more than the sniffles, and I work in an office that seems to have plagues running through it at least once a quarter.

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    Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.