New article above also interesting.. excerpt below..
CDC: School kids may have to get up to 4 flu shots in the fall
By STACEY SINGER
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
School children who have never had a flu shot may need to get vaccinated four times in the fall - twice for seasonal flu, twice for pandemic swine flu - officials at the CDC told health professionals on Wednesday.
Most everyone else should expect three shots.
Getting vaccinated
* Roll up your sleeve
Regular flu - The shots will be ready early this year, possibly in late August. If you've had one before, it's a one-shot deal.
Pandemic flu- The mass vaccination campaign could start some time in October. It will require two doses for full protection. Pregnant women and children will have access to preservative-free shots.
Who should get flu shots?
Eventually, nearly everyone.
Initially, probably those most at risk. The precise plan is still being developed.
Front-line health care workers, asthmatics, diabetics, pregnant women, children, and household contacts of infants too young to be vaccinated will top the list.
Where will the shots be given?
Regular flu shots will be distributed in the usual way. Pandemic flu shot distribution is still being worked out. The local health department will likely hire a private company. It will set up mass vaccination clinics at schools, stores and workplaces.
Source: CDC
Five manufacturers are now making vaccines against the pandemic H1N1 swine flu virus, said Dr. Tom T. Shimabukuro at the CDC's Immunization Services Division, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.
They are well on their way to having between 40 million and 160 million doses of egg-based vaccine available in the United States by October, added Dr. Pascale Wortley the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's pandemic vaccine coordinator.
On the high end, that would be enough vaccine for everyone in the United States who wanted it by January. But on the low end, it would require prioritizing distribution to health care workers and those at higher risk for complications - including children, pregnant women, and people with chronic diseases and asthma, Wortley said.
"This vaccine campaign will unfold quite differently than seasonal flu," said Wortley, in a conference call with health care professionals nationwide on Wednesday. "This is a huge endeavor we're gearing up for."
Apparently, for good reason. The speed with which the H1N1 swine flu strain has spread globally has been documented meticulously, said the CDC's Dr. Joseph Bresee, chief of epidemiology in the flu division.
"In a very short time we've gone from a couple of cases in two southern California kids to 94,000 cases in 134 countries worldwide," he said
A food log is a great idea! I hope that you can isolate the cause. They didn't hurt or itch or anything like that, but they didn't look right. At first I thought it was skin cancer or something!
I looked up petechiae as Eric recommended in the co...
Yes- they're called petechiae and I've always heard that they are liver-related. They can also be due to anemia and low platelet count. If you also bruise easily, that might be the likely cause.
I get them too and they come and go.
Pink Lady Apple,
I used to get those. I know exactly what they look like - they are tiny, they can vary in size, they are circular, flat, and very red. They do look like blood blisters, but flat!
I stop getting them after I did an extended water...
I really believe that is possible to heal all of the body...regeneration of tissue is not a far fetched concept. There is a case of a man who re-grew a finger, recently! I have to dig to find the article, but I read it on naturalnews.com. Mind you...
i can understand american accent, i have been working with them for quite a while
my ear is not tuned to ause accent yet, i guess you are my first ause friend to talk with :)
but i am gonna catch up soon