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National Pandemic Flu Line Closed.

It has been said today that the Pandemic Flu service will be withdrawn as from 11th February but can be restored within 7 days if it is needed.

The phone line & the website will be taken down, and any leaflets ect will be excluded from advertising it. The website holds information about Swine Flu, such as the symptoms and what to do and who to call, as well as the phone line in which you can call to talk to some one with relevant information.

Dr Ridge explains “the antiviral collection points will continue to operate until the end of the flu season (the end of March 2010) but antivirals will only be authorised via health care professionals using either antiviral authorisation vouchers or the right hand side of FP10s”.

Six allergic reactions to H1N1 jab

Doctors in Canada have stopped using a batch of swine-flu vaccines after six recipients became seriously ill, pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline says.

Spokesman Gwenan White said the firm had advised medical staff to refrain from using the particular batch while the cause of the reaction was investigated, adding that no other stocks had been affected.

White said the company always monitored drugs for signs of problems, but that allergic reactions in some people were always a risk.

Tim Vail, a spokesman for Canada’s health minister, confirmed that six people had suffered an adverse reaction to the vaccine, adding that the majority of the batch in question had now been administered.

“We’re not seeing any thing wild or spooky or crazy about our vaccine at all,” Vail said.

GlaxoSmithKline has distributed around 7.5 million doses of the vaccine in Canada.

Copyright © Press Association 2009

Measures to fight H1N1 swine flu in Europe

Here are some details about measures
taken to fight H1N1, swine flu, which has killed more than 7,900
people globally, according to the latest European Centre for
Disease prevention and Control (ECDC) tallies.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) declared an H1N1 pandemic on June 11, indicating the first influenza pandemic since 1968 was under way.

 * LATEST MEASURES BY GOVERNMENTS:

CROATIA - The Health Ministry says the first delivery of 140,000 vaccines arrived on Tuesday. Vaccination against H1N1 will start on Nov. 27, with those seen as most at risk to be targeted first — people with chronic diseases, pregnant women, young children, the obese and healthcare workers.

FRANCE - Almost 240 schools around the country have had to close in an effort to contain particularly virulent outbreaks.

– A recent jump in cases has given a much-needed boost to a national vaccination campaign, with queues forming at centres over the weekend as word spread of a rise in deaths.

– When the centres initially opened earlier this month, the French media, said they were largely deserted, with medical staff having to throw away large numbers of unused vaccinations.

HUNGARY - Many schools around the country have ordered temporary shutdowns, none for more than a few days.

– Schools are mandated to vaccinate students, but parental approval is needed.

– Hungary is establishing vaccination centres, 200 will be in operation by Nov. 27.

– For weeks, most Hungarians refused to get vaccinated, for fear of side effects, especially in children and pregnant women.

NETHERLANDS - The Netherlands started vaccinating children against H1N1 on Monday. Some 830,000 children aged from six months up to and including four-year-olds will be vaccinated.

– Babies up to six months old will not be vaccinated because the vaccine has not been tested on that age group. Some 200,000 members of families with babies younger than six months will be vaccinated instead.

– At 237 different locations across the Netherlands, parents can visit centres of municipal health organisation GGD to have the vaccinations, with most vaccinations taking place this week. A second round of shots will occur in mid-December.

– The vaccination of children comes after the Netherlands started vaccinating risk groups against the virus on Nov. 9.

POLAND - Poland’s Health Ministry decided last week to release its Tamiflu stock to pharmacies.

– Health Minister Ewa Kopacz has said not enough tests have been conducted to ensure flu vaccinations are safe and is wants more guarantees from pharmaceutical firms before any purchase.

– Several schools have been temporarily closed across the country, but there has been no central recommendation to do so.

PORTUGAL - Portugal started vaccination in the top priority group including pregnant women on Oct. 26, spreading it to the next group including babies below 2 years of age on Nov. 16.

– The government has ordered 6 million doses of GlaxoSmithKline’s Pandemrix vaccine aiming to cover a third of the population of about 10 million.

 

* SOME NUMBERS:

TOTAL REPORTED DEATHS: 7,909*

REGIONAL BREAKDOWN:

AREA TOTAL DEATHS:

EU AND EFTA COUNTRIES                                 714

OTHER EUROPEAN COUNTRIES & CENTRAL ASIA 91

MEDITERRANEAN AND MIDDLE-EAST                                       539

AFRICA                                                       108

NORTH AMERICA                                                                                 2,088

CENTRAL AMERICA & CARIBBEAN                   174

SOUTH AMERICA                                                                                 2,780

NORTH-EAST & SOUTH ASIA                                                          833

SOUTH-EAST ASIA                                                                              367

AUSTRALIA & PACIFIC                                   215

Source: Reuters.com

The swine flu threat

As media coverage dwindled, the swine flu threat faded from the minds of most Americans, despite warnings that we weren’t out of the woods yet. Many believed that the virus could return with a vengeance come flu season, but it appears that even those predictions may have been optimistic. On Wednesday, the WHO announced that 74 countries had reported 27,737 cases of H1N1, including 141 deaths. About half of the confirmed cases are in the U.S. In Australia, the number of reported cases has tripled in the last week, drawing the attention of the WHO as it evaluated the severity of the threat.

Pharmaceuticals in Focus

As perverse as it sounds, this latest development is good news for some. Pharmaceutical manufacturers have continued work on vaccines behind the scenes despite the apparent abatement of the threat. With the elevation of the pandemic alert level from 5 to 6, many pharmaceutical companies are likely to be flooded with requests (and funding) for vaccine development and testing. And as the likelihood of a worst-case scenario (a full-blown global outbreak) increases, so does the potential for a huge payday for vaccine manufacturers.

 

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