WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama has signed
a proclamation declaring swine flu a national emergency, the White
House said Saturday.
“In
keeping with the administration’s proactive approach to H1N1 Flu,
President Obama last night signed a proclamation declaring 2009-H1N1
Influenza a national emergency,” it said in a statement. “The
proclamation enhances the ability of our nation’s medical treatment
facilities to handle a surge in H1N1 patients by allowing, as needed,
the waiver of certain standard federal requirements on a case-by-case
basis.”
Officials described the move as similar to a declaration ahead of a hurricane making landfall.
On Friday, federal health officials said more Americans have been vaccinated against seasonal flu this fall than ever before by this time of year.
Sixty
million people have gotten the winter flu vaccine — probably
because they’re paying more attention to flu warnings in general,
thanks to swine flu. It’s an unprecedented number of seasonal
Part
of it is due to supply: There are already 85 million doses of seasonal
flu vaccine available, a much larger amount than usual for this early
in the fall. Most years, roughly 100 million doses are used during the
season.
But a big
factor probably is that swine flu is drawing attention to public health
warnings that seasonal flu is also a deadly illness that can be
prevented through vaccinations, said Joe Quimby, a spokesman for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
“There’s been a heightened awareness in the American public due to H1N1 this year,” said Quimby.
More widespread than ever
Swine flu is also more widespread now than it’s ever been, and has resulted in more than 1,000 U.S. deaths so far.
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Flu
illnesses are as widespread now as they are at the winter peak of
normal flu seasons, CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden told reporters
Friday. “To be basically in the peak of flu season in October is
extremely unusual,” he said.
“We
expect that influenza will occur in waves and we can’t predict how
high, how far or how long the wave will go or when the next will come,”
he added.
“Many
millions” of Americans have had swine flu so far, according to an
estimate he gave at a Friday press conference. The government doesn’t
test everyone to confirm swine flu so it doesn’t have an exact count.
Frieden updated some other estimates, too, saying there have been more than 20,000 hospitalizations.
Nearly 100 swine flu deaths in children have been reported, CDC officials also said.
Forty-six
states now have widespread flu activity. The only states without
widespread flu are Connecticut, Hawaii, New Jersey and South Carolina.
There are at least two different types of flu causing illnesses; tests
from about 5,000 patients suggest that nearly all the flu cases are
swine flu.
‘Frustrating’ production delays
This
year’s seasonal flu vaccine won’t protect against swine flu; a separate
swine flu vaccine is needed. Vaccine production takes several months,
and the work on seasonal vaccine was already well under way when swine
flu was first identified in April. It was too late for the swine flu
virus to be included in the seasonal doses.
Because
of swine flu vaccine production delays, the government has backed off
initial, optimistic estimates that as many as 120 million vaccine doses
would be available by mid-October. As of Wednesday, only 11 million
doses had been shipped to health departments, doctor’s offices and other providers across the country, CDC officials said.
“It’s frustrating to all of us. We wish there were more vaccine available,” Frieden said.
The
flu virus has to be grown in chicken eggs, and the yield hasn’t been as
high as was initially hoped, CDC officials explained. “Even if you yell
at them, they don’t grow faster,” Frieden said.
He added that 5 million new doses became available in the past week, and vaccine should be more plentiful soon.
Much of the vaccine currently available is a nasal spray from AstraZeneca’s unit MedImmune.
The
Obama administration has ordered vaccine from five manufacturers:
Sanofi-Aventis SA, CSL Ltd, Novartis AG, GlaxoSmithKline and
AstraZeneca’s MedImmune.
Global figures
Also
Friday, the World Health Organization reported more than 414,000
laboratory confirmed cases of H1N1 worldwide, with nearly 5,000 deaths.
But the Geneva-based health agency noted that the figures were only the tip of the iceberg.
“As
many countries have stopped counting individual cases, particularly of
milder illness, the case count is significantly lower than the actual
number of cases that have occurred,” WHO said.
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