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Young hit hardest by swine flu: CDC

Daniela Diaz,11, receives a H1N1 nasal flu spray vaccine from nurse Shajaira Powell-Bailey at the Broadmoor Elementary school October 19, 2009 in Miami, Florida. The Miami-Dade County Health Department began distribution its initial shipments of the H1N1 Influenza vaccine and is launching a vaccination campaign in conjunction with the Miami-Dade County Public Schools, The Children�s Trust and The Trust�s partner health agencies. Photo courtesy AFP.Iraqi provinces shut schools over swine flu fears
Two southern Iraqi provinces will shut their nearly 2,500 schools this week in a bid to combat swine flu, officials said on Tuesday. The mass closures in Dhi Qar and Wassit provinces, due to start on Wednesday and Thursday respectively, are Iraq's first since the A(H1N1) virus was first reported in Mexico in April. Universities, however, will remain open in both provinces. "We took the decision to close the schools because we are afraid for the health of our students," Dhi Qar's environmental director Raji Naeema told AFP. "School bathrooms are dirty, drinking water is not clean and the classes are so crowded." In all, 1,477 schools will be closed in Dhi Qar for 10 days, beginning Thursday, affecting around 393,000 pupils. Dhi Qar's health chief Hadi Badr al-Rayahi said a 22-year-old man had been diagnosed with the virus and was being treated in Al-Refaie hospital, 90 kilometres (55 miles) north of the provincial capital Nasiriyah. In Wassit province, some 980 schools will be shut from Wednesday for five days after several students at one of the province's schools were diagnosed with A(H1N1). "The decision was taken to prevent a spread of influenza and an increase in the number of cases," Sunduz Faisal, a senior Wassit official, told AFP. Provincial health chief Maher Gaanem Murad confirmed "31 cases at a secondary school in the al-Hai district." The A(H1N1) virus has killed at least 4,735 people since it was first reported in April in Mexico, according to a WHO tally. Most deaths have occurred in the Americas, where 3,406 have been reported. In total, Iraq has seen 472 cases, the majority in US troops stationed in the country, health services director Isan Jaffar said on Monday.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 20, 2009
Swine flu is "a younger person's disease," with more than half of hospitalizations and nearly a quarter of deaths from H1N1 involving people under the age of 25, a top health official said Tuesday.

Fifty-three percent of nearly 4,900 laboratory-confirmed cases of swine flu between September 1 and October 10 involved patients under the age of 25, Anne Schuchat, an expert on respiratory diseases and immunization at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told reporters.

Almost a quarter of the 292 deaths from swine flu which were reported in the same time period were in young adults, teens and children, and two-thirds of deaths from H1N1 were in the 25-64 age group, Schuchat said.

"This is dramatically different than what we see with seasonal flu" where 90 percent of fatalities and 60 percent of hospitalizations occur in people 65 and over, said Schuchat.

Only 12 percent of fatalities and seven percent of hospitalizations for swine flu have involved patients aged 65 and over.

H1N1 flu is "still a younger person's disease," and because it is disproportionately affecting young people, they have been made a target population for the massive vaccination effort that is being rolled out across the United States, Schuchat said.

As of Monday, 12.8 million doses of H1N1 vaccine were available, and the vast majority of those doses -- 10.8 million -- have been ordered by the states.

That meant there were three million more doses available this week than last, when the effort to vaccinate anyone who wants to be innoculated against H1N1 flu began in earnest.

Schuchat hailed as "a significant achievement" the fact that a steady supply of what she called safe, effective vaccine continues to flow out to health officials around the United States.

"Orders are being filled quickly. Vaccine is being given out all around the country," she said.

"This is a significant achievement, to have what we believe is a safe and very effective vaccine available in our states and counties... just since the April recognition of this virus," she said.

At least 4,735 people have died from swine flu infections since April, when an outbreak of H1N1 flu was first reported in Mexico, the World Health Organization has said.

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