Friday, July 17, 2009

Swine-Flu Vaccination UK plans

The medical establishment in Britain, the nation hardest hit by swine flu outside North America, is scrambling to roll out a large-scale vaccination program in an effort to protect its population against a virus that threatens to spread rapidly here in coming weeks.
The state-run health system is deciding whether to hire private contractors to help doctors carry out the massive vaccination job, said Peter Holden, a general practitioner who represents the British Medical Association in pandemic-flu planning with the government. Doctors would rather handle the shots themselves, he said, but as phone calls and office visits related to swine flu have jumped, they are concerned the extra work will overwhelm them unless they suspend some other routine care.
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A postman delivers a leaflets giving information about swine flu to a home in Scotland. The leaflets were delivered to every household in the U.K.
In his own practice in the Peak District in central England, Dr. Holden is making plans for each doctor or nurse to vaccinate between 30 and 40 people an hour. "There'll be no chitchat. It will be, 'Are you allergic to anything? Bang, in, out,'" he said.
It isn't yet clear how many doses will be needed per person, but many flu experts believe it will be two.
Since the spring, 17 Britons have died after being infected with the H1N1 virus that is causing the swine-flu pandemic, according to U.K. officials. The U.K. recently recorded its first swine-flu death in an otherwise healthy patient, an event that set off further concern, even as other deaths, including that of a 6-year-old girl last week, have gained attention.
As of July 6, the U.K. had 7,447 confirmed cases, ranking the country fourth in the world, behind the U.S., Mexico and Canada, according to the World Health Organization's most recent figures. World-wide, 429 people have died from swine flu and 94,512 have been infected, according to the WHO.

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