We will not be getting vaccinated. We have me and dh, ds8, ds6, dd4.5 and all 3 kids go to school full time and all 3 had swine come through their schools last spring (no one caught it).
My concerns are the lack of long term testing on the vaccine and the fact that the swine flu is on par with the seasonal flu which tends to mutate and the vaccine ends up being useless anyhow. The debacle over the 70's swine vaccine (yes times change but it shows what can happen when you rush to put out an untested vax) and the fact that then the vaccine cause more harm than the flu itself is very unsettling for me. Even if we do happen to have swine come through the house, it means we have a lifelong immunity to that strain vs needing repeated vaccinations hoping it protects for this season.
What I want to know is what are the "pre existing conditions" that caused the few that have died to succumb to H1N1. We all know pregnancy, obesity has been linked, and respiratory issues, but I would like to see a concrete if you have X Y or Z you are more at risk than the general population. I have 1 child who has WPW, several small VSD's, an ASD (all cardio issues) and ITP (blood platelet issue) but he also is medically exempt from vaccinations because they are what caused his ITP. We meet with his Cardio Electrophysiologist on 8/20 to to stress testing and discuss his fate surgery wise and yes we will discuss if his trio of cardio issues puts him at more risk, (ie if he gets the flu should he be immediately checked into the hospital like he was with pneumonia due to ITP/Cadio), or do we follow the same route we would with others if they got sick.
As for precautions, I am in MA and our schools locally have a 7 day rule in effect. basically if you spike a fever over 100 and it is accompanied by a cough, runny nose, aches, or stomach issues you are out for 7 days - period. Even if your fever is resolved the next day and symptoms are gone, you are still out. A lot of parents we're inconvenienced in the Spring when we had swine come through the schools, but it did help prevent it's spread. At home my kids wash their hands and faces as they walk in the door - regardless of where they are coming from. They also have sani-wipes in their snack and lunch bags, and the teachers are well stocked on wipes for helping to keep the classrooms clean.
I'm sure we'll see more spread when school opens here in Sept, I'm not going to deny that at all. But I'm also not too concerned about it since it's fairly mild except for those with "pre existing conditions" (if only we knew what exactly those were) and we don't want to play the rush to vaccinate game until we've seen results of the long term testing.
Oh and we're going to Disney in Feb at the hight of the flu season up here in the North East. No plans to change that.
