Posts Tagged ‘H1N1’

Maggie
Schmerin

Spectrum Infection: Lessons Learned - H1N1 A Year Later

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

nicGreetings from the 44th National Immunization Conference in Atlanta! With the one year anniversary of the H1N1 outbreak upon us this week, there is not a more fitting place for officials from NIH, HHS, CDC, FDA, state and local health agencies, vaccine advocacy organizations and vaccine manufacturers to gather.

Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius delivered the conference's keynote address, which focused on the response to the H1N1 flu pandemic, the lessons learned and efforts to strengthen America's health security in the future.

On April 21, 2009, the CDC was alerted to a new strain of influenza in California and Texas, similar to one that was presenting in Mexico. Kathleen Sebelius was still serving as governor of Kansas, but seven short days later would be sworn in as our country's 21st HHS Secretary and quickly whisked into the Situation Room at the White House where President Obama and other government leaders were beginning to mount an attack on what would become the world's first pandemic in 40 years.

Over the course of the past 12 months, the federal government worked alongside state and local health agencies to ensure that Americans were prepared for and protected against H1N1, and the H1N1 vaccine was the keystone of these efforts. As Secretary Sebelius stated, "The H1N1 vaccine was the most ambitious immunization campaign ever." (more...)

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

 
Katharine
Perrow

The Results Are In: WHO and CDC Release Data on the 2009 Swine Flu

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Last year there was not enough time to include the H1N1 strain in the formulation for the annual seasonal flu vaccine, but this year will be different. After its four-day influenza meeting, the World Health Organization (WHO) has recommended that the 2010 seasonal flu vaccine contain protection from the swine flu.  

Despite the fact that experts believe a third wave in the spring is an improbability, the WHO expects swine flu to remain a significant threat in the years ahead. The WHO plans to discuss this third wave probability during another official meeting, set to take place next week. Is this season's H1N1 pandemic officially over? We'll have to wait and see what comes out of the meeting.

From the field, we're hearing that doctors and clinics throughout the U.S. are reporting a decrease in the typical number of seasonal flu cases. Cases of swine flu, and similar conditions such as RSV, which primarily affects small children, have now surpassed those of seasonal flu patients. Public health officials are slightly puzzled by this. Perhaps more will come to light after we've become accustomed to H1N1 as an official part of the influenza conversation. (more...)

Tags: , , ,

 
Michael
Cover

In a Pandemic, Early Intervention Can Save Lives

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

As we learn more about the evolving situation with regard the H1N1 strain of influenza circulating around the world, it is useful to look to our past experiences with pandemic influenza to learn and apply any lessons that can help mitigate sickness and death.

Let's call this a tale of two cities...in the 1918 Spanish Influenza epidemic, a minimum of 50 million people around the world died from the flu or from secondary infection. But not all localities experienced the same death rate, largely due to the public health guidance that was followed in that specific area. In the US, St. Louis and Philadelphia had vastly different outcomes, despite the fact that the same strain of influenza infected their communities.

In 1918, there were no influenza vaccines or antivirals and limited international travel. The public health responses were limited to isolating the ill, quarantining houses, closing schools, canceling worship services, restricting the size of funerals and weddings, closing saloons and theaters, restricting door-to-door sales, discouraging the use of public transportation, staggering the hours of business and factory operations, imposing curfews and, in some places, recommending the use of face masks in public.

(more...)

Tags: , , , , , ,