Sebelius: Swine Flu Shots May Start Early October

September 14, 2009 by Philbert Ross
Filed under: Vaccine 

Sebelius said she is confident the vaccine will be available early enough to beat the peak of the expected flu season this fall and that early doses are intended for health care workers and other high-priority groups.

“Were on track to have an ample supply rolling by the middle of October. But we may have some early vaccine as early as the first full week in October. Well get the vaccine out the door as fast as it rolls off the production line,” she told ABCs “This Week.”

The possibility of early shots follows encouraging news from last week about the swine flu vaccine. Researchers have discovered that one dose instead of two could be enough for healthy adults, and protection could begin once vaccinated within 10 days instead of three weeks.

“Thats great, which means well have a lot more vaccine,” she said. “We also have seen a robust immune response within 10 days, instead of three weeks as was feared.”

Sebelius said the vaccine doses will be distributed immediately to designated locations across the country once they are available.

“Every state has a plan saying these are the sites to get the vaccine as quickly as possible into peoples arms. Thats where the distribution will go,” she said.

“So, the first week in October, we expect some of the vaccine to begin to roll, and by mid-October, to have the kind of supplies we were talking about. But we may have some available earlier. And well get it out to states as fast as it comes off the production lines,” Sebelius said.

One dose means tight supplies of H1N1 vaccine wont be stretched so badly. Had it taken twice that dose, or two shots apiece, half as many people could have received the vaccine.

The winter flu vaccine is widely available now, and health authorities urged people last week to get shots now before swine flu shots start arriving.

In addition to concerns about swine flu, doctors also expect some garden-variety flu this fall as well, an illness that typically kills 36,000 Americans and hospitalizes 200,000 each year.

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