Ind. directing more swine flu vaccine to colleges

Posted In: Life Sciences

By RICK CALLAHAN - Associated Press Writer - Associated Press

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Loading...

State health officials said Wednesday they are directing more swine flu vaccine to Indiana's college campuses in hopes of preventing or reducing a third swine flu outbreak in the state early next year.

State health commissioner Dr. Judy Monroe said Indiana's second swine flu wave, which peaked in late October, began about the time students returned to campuses for fall semester.

Since that peak, hospitalizations and visits to emergency rooms have generally declined each week. Monroe said that decline continued last week, with a 17 percent drop in hospitalizations of people with flu symptoms.

To head off a third swine flu outbreak that could start in January, she said the state is sending more swine flu vaccine to counties with the state's big college campuses to immunize more students before they leave campus for the winter holiday break.

Monroe said the goal is to immunize as many college students as possible before the winter break so they don't return to campus ill or spread the virus during their travels.

She said there's "a window of opportunity" for the state to reach those students over the next few weeks.

"They will be traveling, they'll be on planes, they'll be visiting family members," Monroe said. "We feel that it's really important to get that group vaccinated."

After fall classes began in August and September, Monroe said Indiana's highest rates of swine flu were found among college-age students. To date, 84 percent of the state's confirmed swine flu cases have been among patients between the ages of 6 months and 24 years.

Monroe said additional swine flu vaccines shipments are being sent to Monroe, Tippecanoe, Delaware and Vigo counties — the homes, respectively, of Indiana, Purdue, Ball State and Indiana State universities.

The state has already directed another 10,000 doses of swine flu vaccine to Monroe County, home of IU's 42,000-student Bloomington campus. The state is also looking to direct more vaccine to counties with smaller campuses.

Monroe said that as of Nov. 17, 564,094 doses of vaccine had been administered in Indiana. The state has to date ordered 1,225,200 doses.

Of the vaccines administered, 61 percent have gone to Indiana residents in the 6 months-to-24-years age group. Forty percent of the state's health care and emergency medical workers have been vaccinated, as have about 22 percent of pregnant Indiana women.

Last week, eight Indiana residents died from swine flu, bringing the state's total to 33.

Two of those deaths were age 65 or older — the first time the state had seen swine flu deaths in that age group.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION
Rate Article:  Average 0 out of 5
Register or log in to comment on this article!

0 Comments

Add Comment

Text Only 2000 character limit

Page 1 of 1

New To Market

more

Infrared imaging in radiation free scanner for security

Iscon Video Imaging is introducing two new airport passenger scanners with a patented Thermal-Boosted Infrared Detection System that only shows objects and clothing without any harmful radiation.

First commercial 3-D bio-printer makes human tissue and organs

Invetech, a builder of custom automation for the biomedical, industrial and consumer markets, has delivered the world's first production model 3-D bio-printer to Organovo, developers of the proprietary NovoGen bioprinting technology.

Tools & Technology

more

Antibody cocktail preparation workstation
Antibody cocktail preparation workstation

The Beckman Coulter Antibody Cocktail Preparation Workstation automatically combines antibodies and staining dyes from individual vials into tubes or vials staged on the company’s Biomek NXp deck.

Hydrophilic PTFE filters for microelectronics manufacturing

W. L. Gore & Associates (Gore) has added hydrophilic PTFE filters to its expanding line of cartridge filters for bulk high-purity chemicals used in microelectronics manufacturing, including LCD, semiconductor, hard disk drive, and photovoltaic.

Advertisement

Advertisement