Guest guest Posted February 23, 2006 Report Share Posted February 23, 2006 *Wider Flu Vaccination Urged* Target Group Includes Kids Age 2 to 5 and Their Households By Brown Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, February 23, 2006; A04 wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/22/AR2006022202080.html The committee that sets federal immunization policy recommended yesterday that children 2 to 5 years old be vaccinated against influenza every year, expanding the " target population " for flu shots and inching toward the day when they will be recommended for everyone. The government had previously recommended yearly flu vaccination only for children age 6 months to 23 months. The new recommendation also includes " household contacts " of children between their second and fifth birthdays. This group -- parents and older siblings not covered by other recommendations -- outnumbers the children in the new recommendation. Flu vaccination has been urged for years for everyone older than 50, with special attention to people over 65 and those with chronic illnesses. Children older than 6 months with chronic illnesses should also be immunized. Although the number of serious illnesses and deaths from flu in the 2-to-5 age group is small, the virus is responsible for much use of health care and much lost work time by parents, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices found. For that reason alone, it decided, broader use of the vaccine is justified. The decision may have secondary benefits, as well. Recent studies show that vaccinating children may help protect the elderly and chronically ill, who are at highest risk from flu complications. Children are principally responsible for spreading the germ, and with less of it circulating, fewer people will become infected. Boosting demand for flu shots may also encourage more pharmaceutical companies to enter the flu vaccine business or expand existing plant capacity -- both considered important steps in preparing for a possible pandemic, or global outbreak, of a new flu strain. The committee is made up of epidemiologists, infectious-disease specialists and public health officials, most from outside the government. Its recommendations help determine which children can receive free vaccine through federal programs, and they are generally followed by private practitioners as well. The decision demonstrated " something of a paradigm shift " in the committee's usual rationale for expanding immunization, said Schaffner, a physician who is a nonvoting member of the committee. He represents the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases and the Infectious Diseases Society of America. " The committee was persuaded more by the doctor's office visits, the emergency room visits and the use of antibiotics in this age group, " he said. " Those considerations played an even larger role than hospitalizations and deaths in the committee's decision. " Data presented to the committee, which met at the Atlanta headquarters of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, showed that about 85 out of every 1,000 4-year-olds are taken to a doctor for influenza each year, and about 65 are prescribed antibiotics. Antibiotics do not kill influenza virus. It is sometimes difficult, however, to differentiate flu from bacterial infections that may require antibiotics. In the 2003-2004 flu season, 153 children up to age 17 died of confirmed influenza infection, and 70 percent of them were not in one of the high-risk categories. Including healthy children 24 months to 59 months old and the people they live with will add 16.7 million people to the count of potential vaccine recipients -- 5.3 million children and 11.4 million household contacts, said , a CDC epidemiologist. Children who have never been vaccinated against flu require two shots to be protected. Consequently, the new recommendation would require 20 million to 30 million more doses of vaccine. Nobody expects anything close to the entire target population to be reached in the immediate future. In the flu season a year ago -- the first in which all children age 6 months to 23 months were supposed to be vaccinated -- about 48 percent were immunized, according to a government survey. The new recommendation was made, in part, on the assurances by vaccine makers that they could fill the expected demand. This season, 86 million doses of flu vaccine were made and 81 million doses have been shipped, said. Manufacturers say they can make 100 million to 120 million doses next year. Three companies made flu shots this year, and one -- MedImmune, based in Gaithersburg -- made a nasal-spray vaccine containing live weakened virus. Next year, a fourth maker of injected vaccine is expected to be selling flu vaccine in the United States. [Can a state's National Guard protect militarily against the ACIP? The notion is increasingly credible. How can we protect ourselves against the ACIP, the likes of Offitt, local injectors who blindly follow Vaccinology's Orthodoxy? -] © 2006 The Washington Post Company The material in this post is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. 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