Opinion : Flu vaccinations in short supply, so let'€™s be patient - Frontiersman

Flu vaccinations in short supply, so let'€™s be patient


Published on Monday, October 26, 2009 9:43 PM AKDT

State health officials say nearly 600 doses of H1N1 vaccines will be arriving in the Valley Thursday or Friday. Given there are tens of thousands of people living in the Mat-Su Borough, that’s not even a drop in the proverbial bucket.

But it’s a start.

While we wait for more vaccines to arrive, we need to show our courteous side. The young, the infirm and the pregnant need to be at the head of the shot line. People who are not in those categories should wait.

The president has called the swine flu invasion a national emergency. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 1,000 people have died due to this strain of flu. As of late September, five of those were Alaskans. In emergencies, people have to help out. In this case, healthy, older people can help out by putting off getting their injections until all the priority groups have been given the shots or nasal sprays.

The CDC is now calculating the rate of flu cases per 1 million people. CDC charts project that Alaska, Idaho, Oregon and Washington will have 3,799 cases per million. That ranks sixth in the 10 regions. Using an estimated population of 686,293, that means about 2,600 Alaskans will get swine flu. A study done in Canada last summer and Mexico last spring showed a death rate of 7 percent in Canada and 17 percent in Mexico among those with the flu requiring hospitalization. Of course, most people who get the flu won’t need critical care, so the number of deaths in Alaska should be minimal.

One thing that could be problematic for Alaskans is that we travel a lot. Region 5, the upper Midwest, has a rate nearly three times Alaska’s, so if you visit Chicago or Minneapolis or Detroit, your chances of getting the flu go up dramatically and then you bring it home and share it with the rest of us. Region 9, which includes Hawaii, also has a rate of about three times Alaska’s, so you might reconsider that winter vacation to the Islands.

By now, you should all have heard what we can do to minimize the outbreak — cover sneezes, wash hands, stay home if you are sick. If we all do those things, and get shots, Alaska should weather this coming storm in good shape.

Comments

3 comment(s)

    Stuart Thompson wrote on Nov 1, 2009 5:41 AM:

    " I agree with both of the previous posters. All vaccines are provably never safe for everybody. The potential harm is justified "for the greater good".
    The H1N1 deaths haven't even reached 20% of the regular yearly deaths from ordinary flu strains. The so-called experts and trained officials are either illierate (not knowing the definition of "pandemic") or are medical or scientific prostitutes.
    The gullibility and misplaced trust of the American people are being preyed on. "

    Hyped up wrote on Oct 29, 2009 12:00 PM:

    " I am not going to get the H1N1 vaccine. If millions of people were dying, maybe. I don't think even 10,000 people have died. Government hype by a completely incompetent administration has whipped up the hysteria. I'll take my chances. Trust no one, and trust the Obama administration even less. I don't need the arrogant bureaucrats telling me how to sneeze either. Nanny state! "

    Be Informed wrote on Oct 27, 2009 11:39 PM:

    " The young, the infirm and the pregnant are the people that the swine flu vaccine were NOT tested for! Facts printed on the inserts from the vaccine manufacturers! View CBS for the story that they did on the swine flu tornado. Read mercola.com for factual info. This is NOT a major health threat. If it was really a "national emergency" President Obama would want his children vaccinated-but they are not going to be. Please read all that you can to help your loved ones! "

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