Archive for the ‘Novel H1N1 Influenza A (human swine flu)’ Category
Thursday, October 8th, 2009
Scotland funds nurses returning in swine flu pandemic
Nurses and midwives returning to work in Scotland to help in any worsening of the H1N1 outbreak will have their re-registration costs paid for by the Scottish government.
The Nursing and Midwifery Council has written to former members whose registration has lapsed in the previous four years to encourage them to re-register. This would make them available to employers in the event of a surge in the pandemic.
Full article: here.
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Wednesday, October 7th, 2009
Singapore launches program to ensure business continuity during flu pandemic
Singapore launched on Tuesday a program to help businesses remain undisrupted in times of a possible flu pandemic.
The Flu Pandemic Business Continuity Program targets to help at least 1,000 companies become flu pandemic prepared by the end of 2010.
It is part of a 30 million Singapore dollars (20.98 million U.S. dollars) National Business Continuity Management Program announced last year.
Full article: here.
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Tuesday, October 6th, 2009
MDs, nurses pressing for more specific pandemic plan
Canada’s doctors and nurses pressed MPs to help fill the gaps in the national pandemic plan Monday, urging them to ask the government for more consistent communication. They also warned they do not yet feel prepared for a second wave of the H1N1 pandemic.
Representatives from three doctors’ and nurses’ professional organizations, along with the Canadian Medical Association, appeared before the House of Commons health committee and did not hold back in expressing their concerns.
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“We urge you to protect health-care workers and make SARS lessons national lessons. If the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) won’t do it, nurses will.”
Full Article: here.
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Monday, October 5th, 2009
Nasal spray flu vaccine becoming available
The long-awaited first vaccinations against swine flu — the squirt-in-the-nose kind — begin early next week in parts of the country, and states are urging people to be patient until more arrives.
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“We’re moving this out as quickly as we can,” said Oregon’s public health director, Dr. Mel Kohn, who hopes shipments arrive in time to begin some vaccinations on Monday. “This doesn’t do any good sitting in a warehouse.”
Most states are aiming their first small batches at health care workers, hoping to keep them well enough to be on the job as cases of swine flu — what doctors prefer to call the 2009 H1N1 strain — are rapidly increasing nationwide.
In Chicago, firefighters will share first doses with hospitals, to get some emergency responders protected, too.
Full article: here.
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Friday, October 2nd, 2009
Ottawa should speed up approval of H1N1 vaccine, says Ont. minister
Ontario Health Minister David Caplan urged Ottawa on Thursday to speed up approval of the H1N1 vaccine amid concerns that a second wave of the swine flu may have already arrived in the province.
Ontario is equipped to deploy the vaccine quickly, but the province can’t get it until Health Canada issues a licence to the manufacturer, Caplan said.
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Dr. Donald Low, head of the public health laboratories with the Ontario Agency for Health Protection and Promotion, said a number of flu cases have come to emergency departments over the last few days.
The flu activity is concentrated primarily in Toronto, Hamilton and London, said Low, who is also chief microbiologist at Toronto’s Mount Sinai Hospital.
He said there have been few cases of H1N1 in Ontario over the last few weeks, but on Monday, six new cases were confirmed.
“But unfortunately, that’s beyond the control of provincial governments.”
Full article: here.
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Monday, September 21st, 2009
Swine flu ‘could kill millions unless rich nations give £900m’
The swine flu pandemic could kill millions and cause anarchy in the world’s poorest nations unless £900m can be raised from rich countries to pay for vaccines and antiviral medicines, says a UN report leaked to the Observer.
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Gregory Hartl of WHO said the report required an urgent response from rich nations. “There needs to be recognition that the whole world is affected by this pandemic and the chain is only as strong as its weakest link. We have seen how H1N1 has taken hold in richer nations and in the southern hemisphere. We have been given fair warning and must act soon,” he said.
Full Article: here.
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Tuesday, September 8th, 2009
Swine Flu Upsets Rituals of Greeting
…the era of swine flu poses the thorny challenge of how to express cordiality, friendship, even love — while staying, as the authorities recommend, at least three to five feet away from anyone who coughs, sneezes or might otherwise show signs of infection with the H1N1 virus.
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Handshakes have been cut short, kisses aborted. Warm embraces have been supplanted by curt pats on the back.
Full Article: here.
France facing ‘la bise’ ban over swine flu fears
It is as French as croissants and coffee, but “la bise”, France’s age-old method of greeting with a peck on the cheek, is facing a ban due to fears that kissing is the best way to catch swine flu.
Companies and schools have started outlawing the traditional French social ritual following a health ministry warning that it could turn into the kiss of death for the nation in the event of a winter H1N1 pandemic.
Large companies like Axa, the insurance giant, have told employees to salute each other with a wave of the hand rather than a kiss or firm handshake.
Full Article: here.
Parishioners To No Longer Offer Handshake As Sign Of Peace
St. Veronica Church staff distributed a flier at weekend Masses advising that participants should no longer hold hands for the “Our Father” prayer or shake hands during the “sign of peace.”
Full Article: here.
Swedish politician mulls Thai bows to counter swine flu
While several local parishes of the Church of Sweden are advocating the use of fortified wine to prevent the spread of swine flu during communion, a Swedish politician is proposing a different measure to prevent the virus from spreading – the introduction of traditional Thai greetings in an effort to reduce direct contact.
Full Article: here.
Tags: h1n1, handshakes, news round-up, swine flu Posted in Novel H1N1 Influenza A (human swine flu), global health news | No Comments »
Tuesday, September 1st, 2009
CMAJ editorial urges pandemic vaccine without adjuvant for high-risk groups
An editorial in the Canadian Medical Association Journal is urging the government to fast-track pandemic H1N1 vaccine for high-risk groups.
And to do that, it suggests offering these groups the vaccine without an adjuvant, a boosting compound that may stretch limited supplies.
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Using adjuvanted vaccine offers the benefit of faster delivery of enough vaccine to meet Canada’s needs. For instance, it could allow a half dose or a third of a dose to be used for each person, such that each batch that rolls off the production line will protect more people than vaccine without adjuvant.
Full Article: here.
Read the CMAJ editorial here.
Tags: canada, news, swine flu Posted in Novel H1N1 Influenza A (human swine flu) | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 26th, 2009
Study: Half of health staff would refuse swine flu shot, despite plans to vaccinate them first
About half of Hong Kong’s health workers would refuse the swine flu vaccine, new research says, a trend that experts say would likely apply worldwide.
In a study that polled 2,255 Hong Kong health workers this year, researchers found even during the height of global swine flu panic in May, less than half were willing to get vaccinated.
Most said they would pass on the swine flu shot, which is not yet available, because they were afraid of side effects and doubted how safe and effective it would be.
Full Article: here.
Special pandemic fees for doctors ‘outrageous’: nurses’ federation
It’s “outrageous” that any Canadian doctors should be negotiating extra fees for treating H1N1 flu patients during a pandemic, says the president of the Canadian Federation of Nurses.
Linda Silas said she was “stunned” to hear doctors in Alberta have negotiated a special payment rate as high as $518 an hour, in the event the provincial government is forced to declare a public health emergency over the flu pandemic. Alberta nurses, who are salaried employees of the health system, will not be offered enhanced payment.
Full Article: here.
Food and Drug Administration authorizes emergency use of swine flu test for US troops overseas
The Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday it has authorized the emergency use of a swine flu test for U.S. troops overseas, allowing the military to speed up diagnoses and treatment of a virus that could cause widespread infections again this fall.
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The authorization allows for the use of unapproved medical products or unapproved uses of approved medical products during a public health emergency, the FDA said.
The FDA said the test will help to speed up diagnosis of H1N1 infections so that deployed troops can quickly begin treatment.
Full Article: here.
Tags: h1n1, news round-up, swine flu Posted in Novel H1N1 Influenza A (human swine flu), global health news, news, swine flu | No Comments »
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