Guest guest Posted December 21, 2003 Report Share Posted December 21, 2003 What I think is most important about this article is the very last paragraph... 42 deaths, 7 with known flu shot history... " Only 2 of the 7 " had a flu shot... Implying better compliance, fewer deaths... But how do you explain that nearly 1/3 of the children who died, HAD received the flu shot??? By their own admission this " vital " flu shot that everyone is clammering about had a 1/3 failure rate? Things that make you go, hmmmmmm... Other comments? Misty L. Trepke http://www..com CDC asks states to report child flu deaths in likely epidemic http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/health/chi- 0312200211dec20,1,2277516.story By Daniel Yee Associated Press Published December 20, 2003 ATLANTA -- The nation's top health agency on Friday stepped up its response to the unusually early outbreak of flu, launching response teams to states and asking all health departments nationwide to report flu deaths of children. Characterizing the outbreak as a likely epidemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also sought post-mortem tissue samples, autopsy reports and flu virus samples from fatally stricken children. Earlier Friday, Dr. Julie Gerberding, the CDC director, said 42 children have died from the flu this season. She said the CDC field teams will help states deal with the outbreak and evaluate the effectiveness of this year's flu shot. The CDC also activated its emergency operations center to coordinate its efforts. Gerberding said it's too soon to determine how severe this flu season will turn out to be. But in response to a question at a news conference, she said the number of cases and the child deaths indicate the outbreak could be classified as an epidemic. She said the season has followed " typical " flu patterns but started much earlier than usual. The CDC has never required states to report flu deaths, largely because it is hard to distinguish flu from other winter viruses. But the agency has been concerned about the number of normally healthy children dying from this year's flu strain. The agency has estimated that about 92 children under age 5 typically die each year from flu, but that is based on computer models and " in fact is a ballpark estimate, " Dr. Keiji Fukuda, the CDC's top flu epidemiologist, said this week. The child deaths from flu are " very sobering and very worrisome, " Gerberding said, adding that at least 16 of the children who died were ill before catching the flu and that more than half the deaths involved children under 5. Twenty-one of the children were previously healthy and three developed a drug-resistant bacterial infection that complicated their flu treatment. The CDC said they had flu shot data on only seven of the deaths; only two of those children had received a flu shot. At least 36 states have been labeled by the agency as having widespread flu activity, and no state has been untouched. 2003, Chicago Tribune Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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