Swine Flu News

For those of you considering the vaccine, here are the package inserts for the first four FDA approved H1N1 vaccines:

Influenza A (H1N1) 2009 Monovalent Vaccine (Novartis)
http://www.fda.gov/downloads/BiologicsBloodVaccines/Vaccines/ApprovedProducts/UCM182242.pdf

Influenza A (H1N1) 2009 Monovalent Vaccine (MedImmune)
http://www.fda.gov/downloads/BiologicsBloodVaccines/Vaccines/ApprovedProducts/UCM182406.pdf

Influenza A (H1N1) 2009 Monovalent Vaccine (Sanofi-Pasteur)
http://www.fda.gov/downloads/BiologicsBloodVaccines/Vaccines/ApprovedProducts/UCM182404.pdf

Influenza A (H1N1) 2009 Monovalent Vaccine (CSL Limited)
http://www.fda.gov/downloads/BiologicsBloodVaccines/Vaccines/ApprovedProducts/UCM182401.pdf
 
Norvartis is the brand my son got (he's in an H1N1 study....) - happy to report he had no side-effects at all (after one dose- the next is in 2 weeks).:thumbsup2:)

I am sorry to see so many here are currently affected - hope you ALL feel much better and quickly.
 
Sanofi-Pasteur is the one my son got yesterday. He too is in a study.
No side effects yet.
 

Thank you guys for participating in the research studies!!!



My biggest fear has been realized with the swine flu.

Lauren...the girl I take care of with severe CP (pictured below)...now has the swine flu.

Her brother got sick on Sunday and she is sick today.

She was thankfully started on Tamiflu yesterday (before she got sick) because they are concerned about her getting it.

She is only 65 pounds, 50% lung capacity and severe cerebral palsy (which puts here at extremely high risk).

Her Mom is watching her like a hawk. Since I already had it (a week ago following a trip to Disney :rolleyes1), I can help them take care of her and not worry about getting it (I hope!).

I appreciate all of the information provided by this thread. :thumbsup2
 
Thank you guys for participating in the research studies!!!



My biggest fear has been realized with the swine flu.

Lauren...the girl I take care of with severe CP (pictured below)...now has the swine flu.

Her brother got sick on Sunday and she is sick today.

She was thankfully started on Tamiflu yesterday (before she got sick) because they are concerned about her getting it.

She is only 65 pounds, 50% lung capacity and severe cerebral palsy (which puts here at extremely high risk).

Her Mom is watching her like a hawk. Since I already had it (a week ago following a trip to Disney :rolleyes1), I can help them take care of her and not worry about getting it (I hope!).

I appreciate all of the information provided by this thread. :thumbsup2

I will be praying for Lauren. It will be very easy for me to remember her because I am Lauren too. Keep us posted!
 
Sanofi-Pasteur is the one my son got yesterday. He too is in a study.
No side effects yet.
Here's to you guys and hoping he continues to stay side effect-free.:thumbsup2

Thank you guys for participating in the research studies!!!



My biggest fear has been realized with the swine flu.

Lauren...the girl I take care of with severe CP (pictured below)...now has the swine flu.

Her brother got sick on Sunday and she is sick today.

She was thankfully started on Tamiflu yesterday (before she got sick) because they are concerned about her getting it.

She is only 65 pounds, 50% lung capacity and severe cerebral palsy (which puts here at extremely high risk).

Her Mom is watching her like a hawk. Since I already had it (a week ago following a trip to Disney :rolleyes1), I can help them take care of her and not worry about getting it (I hope!).

I appreciate all of the information provided by this thread. :thumbsup2

Thanks for the thanks - it was not the easiest decision ever but it is nice to feel like we are doing good. I feel VERY good about flu vaccines in general and the technology used to generate this one (or, honestly, we wouldnt have done it...) It is a relief to know he's covered - just wish my other child could have gotten it (too old for the study).

I hope Lauren improves quickly - very scary. It's fortunate that she has folks like you that can help watch out for her.
 
Here is a good article about the rapid test:

Quick flu tests, fail the testby ozoneranger

THURSDAY, Aug. 6 (HealthDay News) -- Doctors can't rely on rapid tests to diagnose the pandemic H1N1 swine flu, say U.S health officials who evaluated three kits and found that they miss many infections.

The tests do a better job detecting seasonal flu than H1N1 flu, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. Sensitivity for the H1N1 swine flu was just 40 to 69 percent.

"These are rapid tests that the physician would do in the office while the patient is waiting," said Michael Shaw, associate director for laboratory science in CDC's influenza division and the report's co-author. "These tests can sometimes provide misleading results."

A quick flu test is just one diagnostic tool, Shaw said. "You shouldn't rely on it alone," he said. "There is no substitute for the judgment of the clinician."

Because people might test negative but actually have the flu, Shaw said, "we want to emphasis that the clinician should also go by the patient's symptoms and what they know is circulating in the community."

Positive test results are accurate, however. "But a positive result only tells you it's flu, not what kind," Shaw said. "It could be seasonal, it could be the pandemic strain." In either case, he said, doctors could start antiviral treatment with a drug such as Tamiflu.

For people at high risk for flu complications, doctors should start treatment with antiviral medication and also get a test to confirm the results, which can take 24 hours, Shaw said.

For the report, which is published in the Aug. 7 issue of the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, CDC researchers tested three commercially available rapid influenza diagnostic tests that can identify influenza A or B antigens in about 15 minutes. Respiratory samples were used from 65 people known to have swine flu or seasonal flu.

The tests were able to detect the H1N1 swine flu only when a high percentage of the virus was in the respiratory sample, which means that many infections would be missed, according to the CDC.

Shaw said that people will shed the most virus shortly after symptoms start so, for the most accurate results, it's important to give the test early.

Fast flu tests have been in use for a couple of decades. "It's not news that these tests are not as sensitive as we would like them to be," Shaw said. The question for the CDC was whether they would work with the new pandemic strain, he said.

Dr. Marc Siegel, an associate professor of medicine at New York University Langone Medical Center in New York City, said that anyone currently suffering from the flu has H1N1 swine flu.

Right now, the test is not clinically important, Siegel said. "If you got flu now, this is what you got," he said.

Siegel agrees with the CDC that a flu diagnosis is best made on the basis of a person's symptoms and the flu strains in circulation.
 
I would seriously questions those numbers as reported by a Chinese newspaper. I can find nothing in a U.S. paper that substantiates those numbers.

I would also question that there were 500 deaths in one week. That statistic would mean that the number of deaths in one week alone equaled all the deaths since April. I follow the swine flu news pretty closely, and it seems like some U.S. source would have picked up on that. I'm not saying that it is wrong, but I would like to see a US source to back up that number of deaths in a week's time.
 
Unfortunately, it is a true number. :eek:

U.S. reports 572 flu-related deaths, 5,486 hospitalizations in past week

HOUSTON, Sept. 25 -- The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Friday reported that 572 people had died of influenza and pneumonia-associated complications in the past week, bringing the death toll to 936 since the beginning of September.

Meanwhile, according to the latest statistics released by the CDC, 5,486 people across the country have been admitted last week to hospitals resulting from all types or subtypes of influenza, not just those from the A/H1N1 influenza virus, bringing the total number to 10,082.

In an effort to add additional structure to the aggregate reporting, the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) and the CDC have developed new case definitions for influenza-associated hospitalizations and deaths to be applied for the 2009-2010 influenza season, formally beginning from Oct. 4.

This new system was implemented on Aug. 30, 2009 and replaces the weekly report of laboratory confirmed A/H1N1-related hospitalizations and deaths since July.

States can now report to the CDC either laboratory confirmed or pneumonia and influenza syndromic hospitalizations and deaths resulting from all types or subtypes of influenza. To allow states to implement the new case definition, counts were reset to zero by the CDC on Aug. 30, 2009.

The CDC said the latest data, based on reports by U.S. States and territories on Sept. 22, shows that 26 states had geographically widespread influenza activity in the past week, comparing to 21 states in the previous week.

The five more states that had widespread influenza activity include the most populous states of California and Texas. Meanwhile, four more states had regional influenza activity in the past week, bringing the total to 11.

All these indicate the second wave of the pandemic is imminent.

The seasonal influenza A (H1) and A (H3) viruses co-circulated at low levels with the A/H1N1 virus, the CDC said in a conclusion, adding that 99 percent of all subtyped influenza A viruses being reported to the CDC last week were the new A/H1N1 virus.

However, the CDC said that, during the first three weeks in September, all deaths reported through the 122-Cities Mortality Reporting System due to pneumonia and influenza (P&I) was 6.1 percent, a little over 6.0 percent in the previous week, but still below the epidemic threshold of 6.3 percent, the CDC explained on its website.

Nationwide, 4.6 percent of patient visits -- comparing to 4.4 percent in the previous week -- were due to influenza-like illness(ILI), according to the CDC experts, who point out to the fact that this percentage more than doubles the national baseline of 2.4 percent.

The A/H1N1 virus infection was first identified in the United States in late April. By August, 555 people had died of the new virus with hospitalizations of 8,842. More than 40,000 confirmed and probable cases had been reported and more than 1 million infections were estimated to have occurred in the United States.

The CDC and state officials are preparing for massive A/H1N1 flu immunizations, starting with school children in the first week of October.
 
I would also question that there were 500 deaths in one week. That statistic would mean that the number of deaths in one week alone equaled all the deaths since April. I follow the swine flu news pretty closely, and it seems like some U.S. source would have picked up on that. I'm not saying that it is wrong, but I would like to see a US source to back up that number of deaths in a week's time.

Keep in mind that the summer numbers were pretty low-the southern hemisphere was having their winter. The southern hemisphere makes up only 10% of the world's population. Expect to see much greater numbers of infection and deaths based on that alone.

I also read from several sources this or last week about the huge increase in deaths.
 
Could you give a link for that article? It is the same as the China article. Is there a US paper or website to back this up?

This is the CDC report released at the end of last week and it doesn't mention anything about the number of deaths doubling last week.

http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/update.htm

I am not saying this information is false, but I would like to see a US source.
 
My apologies, I saw Houston and thought that it was a different source. I traced it back and they were using the original China source. I checked the CDC and this is a snip about deaths. I find it interesting that they set counts to 0 on August 30.

Pneumonia and Influenza Hospitalization and Death Tracking:
This new system was implemented on August 30, 2009, and replaces the weekly report of laboratory confirmed 2009 H1N1-related hospitalizations and deaths. Jurisdictions can now report to CDC either laboratory confirmed or pneumonia and influenza syndromic-based counts of hospitalizations and deaths resulting from all types or subtypes of influenza, not just those from 2009 H1N1 influenza virus. To allow jurisdictions to implement the new case definition, counts were reset to zero on August 30, 2009. From August 30-September 19, 2009, 10,082 hospitalizations and 936 deaths associated with influenza virus infection or based on syndromic surveillance for influenza and pneumonia, were reported to CDC. This is the third week of data from this new system and reflects reports by 52 jurisdictions. CDC will continue to use its traditional surveillance systems to track the progress of the remainder of the 2008-09 season, and for the 2009-10 influenza season, which officially begins October 4, 2009.


I will post the entirety of the CDC update in my next post. It is interesting to read.
 
Thanks! I wasn't doubting anyone here, but sometimes articles can be misleading (like the one from Britain that said people had died from GBS due to the vaccine and they didn't make it clear they were talking about 1976). I know there will be an increase in deaths with the current wave of illness. Almost everyone I know has had a flu-like illness recently (I am in Tennessee). Thankfully, I don't know anyone who has died, but I do know several who had pneumonia and have recovered. Hopefully, the vaccine will help keep the death count low.
 
You are welcome. I know, everyone around here is sick. I hope you stay healthy. :)
 












Receive up to $1,000 in Onboard Credit and a Gift Basket!
That’s right — when you book your Disney Cruise with Dreams Unlimited Travel, you’ll receive incredible shipboard credits to spend during your vacation!
CLICK HERE













DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter DIS Bluesky

Back
Top