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Wed, 10 Dec 2003 13:51:09 -0500

HSI - Jenny Thompson

Does This Smell Bad?

 

Does This Smell Bad?

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

December 10, 2003

 

**************************************************************

 

Dear Reader,

 

You've probably heard the news by now: Doctors are running low

on flu vaccines and are expected to run out completely before

the flu season winds down. In one of the TV reports I saw, the

commentator asked, " How could this happen? " And I had to laugh.

How could it happen?

 

Hmmm... let's put on our thinking caps and try real hard to

figure it out. Could it possibly be because nearly every TV news

broadcast for the past month has been saying that this will be

the worst flu season in years and everyone needs to drop what

they're doing - RIGHT NOW! - and go get a flu shot?

 

Making this news all the more dire is the fact that the final

drop of flu vaccine has already been shipped out, so once the

vaccine supply is used up, no more vaccine can be produced until

next year. But before you barricade yourself in your home,

vowing to stay safe inside until the flu season has passed, rest

assured that there JUST HAPPENS to be an alternative to the

dwindling vaccine supplies.

 

-----------------------------

Come and get it!

-----------------------------

 

Remember FluMist? It's the nasal-spray flu vaccine I first told

you about in the e-Alert " Nose Candy " (7/8/03). Unlike the

conventional flu shot, which contains inactivated flu strains,

FluMist contains three living flu strains. The Centers for

Disease Control (CDC) calls FluMist " live attenuated influenza

vaccine " or LAIV. In other words, the three strains are diluted.

They're alive as you or me, but watered down.

 

Now - a show of hands - how many would feel comfortable inhaling

not one, not two, but THREE LIVING flu strains? Not too many, is

my guess. Which is probably one of the main reasons why ABC News

has described sales of FluMist as " disappointing. " Disappointing

so far, anyway.

 

According to the Washington Post, the CDC gave FluMist a nice

little boost last week when a statement was released " reminding "

the public that FluMist is an appropriate alternative to the flu

shot for those who are both healthy and between the ages of 5

and 49. Then on Monday, CDC director Dr. Julie Gerberding made

appearances on several national news broadcasts (including ABC

and CNN) and mentioned that a large supply of FluMist is still

available.

 

Now is it just me and my cynical streak, or does it seem somehow

to be a very, let's say " interesting, " coincidence that the

country has been plunged into this supposedly dire emergency of

vaccine shortage in the same year that a major new vaccine

product is launched? No one I know has said they haven't been

able to get a flu shot. And I haven't read about any doctors

turning away patients who have requested a shot. But if the CDC

says the supply is low, then I suppose the supply is low. And if

the CDC says that the supply of FluMist is high, then I'm sure

the supply is high.

 

What Dr. Gerberding didn't mention is that FluMist costs more

than twice the amount of the flu shot. And because of this much

steeper cost, many insurance companies won't offer coverage for

FluMist. But that's only part of the FluMist problem.

 

-----------------------------

Pig in a poke

-----------------------------

 

As I stated in the July e-Alert, there's a long list of

potential problems with FluMist, but one of the key problems is

the fact that those who decide to sniff living viruses into

their heads instantly become infected by the flu. The immune

system then responds by creating more antibodies that, in

theory, will fight off any full-strength flu strains that might

come along. But in the meantime, there's a possibility that

those who are recently FluMisted could be (I'll bet you already

guessed it) contagious!

 

Nice. Just what we need in the middle of a supposed flu

epidemic: more contagious people running around.

 

Of course, the makers of FluMist (MedImmune, a subsidiary of the

drug giant Wyeth) play down the possibility of their product

spreading the flu, stating that only a very small percentage of

FluMist users will actually transmit a virus. Nevertheless,

according to a report in Knight-Ridder Newspapers, the CDC

cautions those who get a FluMist vaccine to stay away from

people with vulnerable immune systems, such as the elderly or

those struggling with diseases, for one week. But is one week

long enough? Some hospitals are telling their personnel to allow

three full weeks between their FluMist vaccine and contact with

hospital patients.

 

Why the discrepancy? My guess is that this is such a new vaccine

that no one really knows the parameters yet. Nevertheless, the

CDC seems to be going out of their way to help MedImmune move

their struggling product.

 

Add to that; the CDC web site states: " The optimal time to

receive influenza vaccine is usually in October or November. " So

if they're using the same calendar I'm using, we're already 10

days past the optimal usage period.

 

And add to that; the people who supposedly need a flu vaccine

the most - the elderly, and those with immune system diseases -

shouldn't be taking FluMist at all. The FDA hasn't approved it

for them. So the CDC is pressing those who are least vulnerable

to the flu to run out and get a snootful of this expensive and

relatively untested product, even though it's almost two weeks

past the optimal timing for the vaccine to even work!

 

Does any of this smell bad to you?

 

-----------------------------

Bouncing back

-----------------------------

 

Without question, many are going to come down with the flu or

some other unpleasant virus this season. Tomorrow I'll leave the

cares and woes of vaccines behind to take a look at some of the

natural treatments that can help you kick a viral illness, while

giving your immune system every advantage to do its best work.

And they even work in December!

 

**************************************************************

To start receiving your own copy of the HSI e-Alert, visit

http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/freecopy.html

Or forward this e-mail to a friend so they can sign-up to

receive their own copy of the HSI e-Alert.

 

**************************************************************

 

... and another thing

 

Normally I'm not a bit shy about putting in my 2 cents on a

topic. In fact, I've kept a huge penny collection handy ever

since I spoke my first words. But today I'm going to up the ante

and put in my 10 cents...

 

In 1937, the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis was

established by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to raise

funds for polio research. Eddie Cantor, a popular comedian of

the time, asked audiences to donate dimes to the foundation.

This drive was referred to as the " March of Dimes, " which the

foundation later adopted as its name. In 1946, FDR's profile was

added to the dime to memorialize a president of great compassion

who was credited for guiding the U.S. out of an economic

depression and through a World War. No small potatoes.

 

But then came the miniseries.

 

I'm sure you heard about all the ruckus raised when CBS tried to

air a miniseries last month that portrayed President Ronald

Reagan in an unflattering light. In a miffed response,

Representative Mark Souder of Indiana introduced the " Ronald

Reagan Dime Act " which proposes to replace FDR's dime profile

with Reagan's. Rep. Souder has signed up 89 co-sponsors for the

bill.

 

Personally I think it's a wonderful idea to find ways to honor

Ronald Reagan. But there are ways to honor him without

deliberately taking an honor away from another great president.

And it certainly appears that Rep. Souder and the co-sponsors of

the bill seem to believe that President Reagan is somehow more

fully honored if a Democratic icon is stripped of his honor.

 

Speaking out on this clearly partisan act, one critic of the

Reagan dime told the Associated Press last week, " It would be

wrong to remove him (FDR) and replace him with another. It is my

hope that the proposed legislation will be withdrawn. " And

before you jump to the conclusion that that quote might have

come from a certain former first lady who is now a senator, it

actually comes from another former first lady, Nancy Reagan, who

added that she felt certain her husband would not support the

Reagan Dime Act.

 

I'm behind the Reagans 100 percent on this one.

 

And that's my 10 cents.

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

**************************************************************

 

Sources:

" Questions and Answers About Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine

(Trade Name FluMist) " Centers for Disease Control, cdc.gov

" Be Cautious, FluMist Users " Richard Harkness, Knight Ridder

Newspapers, 12/4/03, fortwayne.com

" MedImmune Poised as Flu Spreads " The Washington Post, 12/8/03,

washingtonpost.com

" CDC Director: 'Doing Everything We Can' to Distribute Flu

Vaccine " CNN, 12/8/03, cnn.com

" House Tossup In Dime Design " Jim Geraghty, States News Service,

12/8/03, washingtonpost.com

" Nancy Reagan Opposes Replacing FDR With Reagan On Dimes "

Associated Press, 12/5/03, freerepublic.com

 

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