Officials Say Most Can Skip Flu Shot
Public health officials say Americans should roll up
their sleeves for a dose of reality: For most of us, getting
a flu shot is not a life-or-death matter.
The flu vaccine will not necessarily prevent you from experiencing
the flu's miserable symptoms, like fever, hacking cough, runny
nose and "hit-by-a-truck" body aches. Studies show the shot generally
works well, but its effectiveness can range from 52 to 90 percent
depending on the strain of virus and a person's age. If you are elderly or chronically ill, the vaccine can help
jump-start your body's weakened defenses and perhaps prevent
the worst from happening. But the millions of people who are younger and healthier do
not really need it — especially during a vaccine shortage, public
health officials say. "Right now the entire country runs on fear and we don't need
to live like that," said Catharine A. Kopac, a Georgetown University
gerontology researcher. "We somehow think we should be disease-free
all the time. If you're leading a healthy life and you get sick
with the flu, you're probably going to get through it." For years, most people ignored the government's vaccination
campaign, in part because of persistent myths that the shot hurts
(not much; the needle is small) and it makes you sick (no, the
conventional vaccine is made from dead virus). As recently as last year, 4 million doses of vaccine went unused,
even though an alarming early strain of influenza emerged and
gained attention because several children died from it, particularly
in Colorado. Two-thirds of Americans age 65 and older were vaccinated in
2002. But only 28 percent of people with chronic illness and
30 percent of children 6 months to 23 months old got their shots.
Health care workers were not much better at 38 percent. Nevertheless, the sudden vaccine shortage this fall is igniting
a "scarcity mentality" similar to runs on banks during stock
market crashes and convenience stores when hurricanes brew offshore. Millions
who never bothered to get vaccinated before suddenly are hounding
their doctors, workplace nurses and supermarket clinics. Americans
are crossing borders and proffering their exposed arms; in Seattle,
people are paying $105 to ride a high-speed ferry for a shot
at the dock in Victoria, British Columbia. What is behind this
feverish behavior? Researchers say it is not so much the flu
itself as a more generalized sense of feeling unprotected.
"Not being able to get the shot takes away your control over
your health," said David Ropeik, director of risk communication
at the Harvard School of Public Health. "That sense of being
out of control is scary." Many providers are rationing precious vials for their neediest
patients. For the rest of us, their advice is more motherly:
Wash your hands frequently, and if you do get sick, stay home
and drink hot soup. In the United States, the flu's average annual death toll is
36,000. Rarely do the victims die from the virus itself. Rather,
it weakens their immune systems so that a bacterial infection — often
pneumonia — delivers the fatal blow. In virulent years, pre-existing
conditions like heart disease can raise the death toll. Hospitalizations
have almost quadrupled over the past two decades, to 200,000
annually as physicians recognized the additional danger flu poses. Only two pharmaceutical companies make flu vaccine for the U.S.
market. The vaccine shortage erupted Oct. 5 when regulators shut
Chiron Corp.'s labs in Liverpool, England, cutting the expected
U.S. supply by 48 million doses, or nearly half. "This is our biggest nightmare come true," said Noreen Nicol,
chief clinical officer at the National Jewish Medical and Research
Center in Denver, which received only about half of the 2,000
doses of flu vaccine it ordered. Still, infectious-disease experts say flu should no longer be
a catastrophic illness among otherwise healthy people, at least
not in the way it was in 1918 when it killed 40 million people
worldwide. For one thing, there are still about 61 million vials of vaccine
in the U.S. pipeline. That is roughly equal to the nation's entire
supply in 2000. With proper distribution, that is enough to protect
the 42.8 million Americans who really need anti-viral protection,
said University of Rochester infectious disease specialist John
Treanor.
Also, this year's dominant strain appears to be similar to last
year's. More than one-third of Americans were either vaccinated
or exposed to it naturally, and some doctors believe there ought
to be at least some carry-over immunity.
And unlike 1918, now there are at least four anti-viral medications
that can relieve the flu's worst effects if taken within 48 hours
of the onset of symptoms.
Reference
Source 102
October
26, 2004
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