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As kids' swine flu deaths spike, vaccine reaches public

China says facing 'grim' task of containing swine flu
China said Saturday it had already vaccinated more than 300,000 people against swine flu but warned the nation was facing a "grim" task of preventing outbreaks and keeping the number of deaths in check. "Up to now, there are more than 300,000 people who have received the A(H1N1) vaccine in the whole country," health ministry spokesman Deng Haihua told reporters, according to a transcript on the ministry's website. "Severe cases and deaths might continuously emerge, and the disease prevention and control situation is quite grim," he warned. Deng's comments came just four days after China announced its first swine flu death, after a patient in Tibet succumbed to the virus. The government immediately sent 200,000 doses of A(H1N1) vaccine to the Himalayan region. By Friday, China had recorded a total of 22,830 cases of swine flu, more than 17,000 of which were reported in September alone, Deng said.

'Anti-swine flu' business suit on sale in Japan
A Japanese menswear company has begun selling an "anti-swine flu" business suit that it says can reduce the risk of catching the virus. The wool suit is coated with titanium dioxide, which breaks down the virus molecules on contact under ultraviolet light, Haruyama Trading Co. said. The material, which can also reduce odours such as cigarette smoke, will keep its anti-virus properties even after being dry cleaned more than 20 times, the company said. It will go on sale at 272 stores across Japan on Saturday, with a price tag of 52,290 yen (589 dollars), following its launch in Tokyo on Thursday, said company spokesman Ryugo Yamamoto. The company had initially aimed to develop a dirt- and odour-resistant suit, "but laboratory experiments proved that molecules of viruses were actually dissolved three hours after they adhered to the fabric," he said. Japanese people are known for being extremely hygiene-conscious, with thousands of people on the street wearing masks when the first Japanese victims tested positive for swine flu in May. Students and even adult workers are instructed how to effectively wash their hands and gargle, while antibacterial goods ranging from men's socks to a computer mouse are also popular.
by Staff Writers
Silver Spring (AFP) Maryland (AFP) Oct 9, 2009
Amid warnings that child deaths from swine flu are spiking, toddler Bronwen English nervously clutched her teddy bear and waited to be innoculated against the H1N1 virus Friday.

"She's in an age group that has seen a much higher proportion of deaths and complications from H1N1 flu. And her mother's pregnant, so we are very concerned about it coming into the house," Bronwen's father Chad told AFP just as his daughter's anguish at being vaccinated got the better of her and spilled over into tears and sobs.

Bronwen and her dad were among hundreds who had turned up at a nondescript clinic in this Washington suburb to be innoculated against swine flu on the first day the vaccine was made available to the general public in Maryland as part of a massive nationwide vaccination campaign.

As Bronwen waited to be vaccinated, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced that child deaths from swine flu were 'shooting up" in the United States, with 19 deaths from influenza reported in recent days.

"We're now up to 76 children having died from the 2009 H1N1 virus," said Anne Schuchat, a senior official at the CDC.

"To put that in context, in the past three years, the total pediatric influenza deaths ranged from 46 - 88. We've already had 76 children dying from the H1N1 virus and it's only the beginning of October," Schuchat said.

The flu season in the United States runs from August to March; the three previous seasons did not have concurrent outbreaks of seasonal and H1N1 influenza.

Ernesto Magadnan, a Mexican immigrant who has lived in Silver Spring for 20 years, had come because "I hear last week that a friend in Mexico died of this problem."

The new strain of H1N1 flu was first reported in Mexico in April. By June, it had spread around the world and was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organization.

On Monday, the CDC reported that the number of swine flu cases worldwide had jumped by at least 24,000 in two weeks to exceed 343,000, while deaths from the H1N1 virus had topped 4,100.

Some 2.4 million doses of nasal spray vaccine made of greatly weakened, but live, H1N1 virus were delivered this week to state and local health authorities around the United States.

By 7:00 am, dozens of people were waiting in the car park of the Silver Spring clinic, where 2,500 doses of vaccine were available. The free innoculation session was scheduled to begin at 9:00 am.

The would-be vaccinees had ignored what Schuchat called "myths" about the live virus in the nasal spray -- stories that those who were innoculated with it would shed the virus for days and could even fall ill.

They had also set aside fears that the clinical trials of the vaccine had been rushed.

"The indications are that the live virus vaccine is fine for Bronwen's age group," her father Chad English told AFP.

"We don't have any fears about the vaccine, but we certainly have fears of not getting her vaccinated," he said.

Children are among five groups deemed to be at particular risk from the novel swine flu virus.

The free vaccinations at the Silver Spring clinic were available only to children aged two to 18, adults up to age 49 who look after infants younger than six months old, and health care workers up to age 49, nurse Roger Cesaro told the long line of people outside the clinic at 8:45 am.

All had to be free of any chronic health conditions such as asthma or diabetes, and could not have had a nasal spray seasonal flu vaccine or any other live-virus vaccine in the past 28 days, Cesaro said.

Pregnant women were also excluded.

Inside the clinic, fluorescent yellow signs that said "vaccinations" in English and Spanish pointed to a small room, where 10 "vaccinators" waited.

When her turn came, Bronwen buried her face in her dad's chest, refusing to face her vaccinator.

She took a deep breath and watched as her teddy was vaccinated, the tears stopping as she was reassured by older children -- and by teddy's stoicism -- that the procedure was painless.

But then came her turn, and as another toddler screamed nearby, Bronwen joined in the cacophony -- and helped US health officials move a step closer to their goal of administering 250 million doses of swine flu vaccine by year's end.

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Seasonal vaccine provides partial shield against swine flu: study
Paris (AFP) Oct 7, 2009
A vaccine for run-of-the-mill flu also provides some protection against swine flu, especially the severest forms of the disease, Mexican scientists report on Wednesday. The authors stress, however, that their study is limited in scale and that they see no evidence for dropping programmes to vaccinate against the pandemic H1N1 virus. Investigators led by Jose Luis Valdespino-Gomez, an ... read more







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