FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 9, 2004
Contact: Kerre Fisher, (907) 269-2042, cell (907) 748-7398
Or Sherry Hill, (907) 465-1618, cell (907) 321-2838
24,000+ Additional Flu Shots Coming Soon to Alaska Providers
Still not enough for entire population, shots will be restricted to high risk only
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(Anchorage, Alaska) - The Alaska Department of Health & Social Services (DHSS), Division of Public Health today announced that they are in the process of distributing an additional 24,000 flu vaccine doses recently received from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Most providers have not received this vaccine yet, but it should be available to Alaskans within the next two weeks. Additional doses are expected from CDC in the next few weeks; an exact amount is unknown at this time. The Division of Public Health originally ordered 100,000 doses, but received only 60,000 due to the nationwide flu vaccine shortage. The shortage occurred because last month British regulators suspended the manufacturing license of Chiron, one of two flu vaccine manufacturers, for three months and denied their ability to distribute vaccine anywhere in the world. Chiron’s manufacturing plant is located in the United Kingdom.
State and local health officials and the CDC have worked together to assure that all available vaccine is allocated as fairly as possible across the nation. Jointly, they have developed a formula to determine the fairest allocation for each state that takes into account the number of high risk individuals in each state and the number of doses that have already been shipped to each state.
Within Alaska, state public health officials are regularly in contact with public health and private health care providers statewide to determine where additional vaccine may be needed.
“ Some providers have a few doses of vaccine left; some are completely out. We’ll be distributing these additional doses as quickly as possible to those areas of the state most in need,” said Laurel Wood, Division of Public Health Immunization Program Manager.
Although this additional vaccine will help to meet the needs of high-risk populations in Alaska, it will still not be enough to allow vaccination of non high-risk people. Therefore, DHSS continues to ask providers to restrict flu vaccine to persons 65 years of age and older, persons of any age with chronic health conditions such as diabetes and asthma or with weakened immune systems, residents of nursing homes and long term care facilities, children 6 months through 23 months of age, women who will be pregnant during the influenza season, health care workers involved in direct patient care, and out-of-home caregivers of infants younger than 6 months of age.
“ In general, Alaskans have been very supportive of this year’s flu vaccine restrictions,” Wood noted. “Many persons who are not high risk have been willing to forego a flu shot so that those most in need are able to receive one.”
But it
is important that high-risk persons continue to seek a vaccination. “Some
persons who should be vaccinated have not requested the shot because
they are confused by the categories or they think that someone
else is at greater risk,” Wood continued. “All persons
on the high risk listing should be vaccinated, if vaccine is available.”
Epidemiologists with the Division of Public Health are also encouraging
people to take several simple precautions to help guard against
getting or transmitting the flu, including: covering your mouth
and nose when coughing or sneezing, washing your hands frequently
and thoroughly, and if you have flu-like symptoms, staying home
to avoid infecting others.
People in the high-risk categories should
contact their health care provider if they experience flu-like
symptoms.
Influenza is a viral respiratory illness marked by the sudden
onset of fever, headache, extreme tiredness, dry cough, sore
throat,
runny or stuffy nose and muscle aches. The illness is spread
when an infected person coughs, sneezes or talks, sending the
highly
contagious virus into the air.
Additional online information about influenza:
- Alaska Division of Public Health, Section of Epidemiology
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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For more information, please contact
Sherry Hill
Special Assistant to the Commissioner
Juneau Office: (907) 465-1618
Anchorage: (907) 269-7800
Cell: (907) 321-2838
Email: sherry_hill@health.state.ak.usJeff Kasper
Project Director
Juneau Office: (907) 465-8194
Email: jeff_kasper@health.state.ak.us
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