Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: flu + cdc + vaccine  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 2,900 for flu cdc vaccine. (0.25 seconds) 
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News 10 Now
Flu study confirms recommendations for kids
Capital News 9, NY -
Children who receive all recommended flu vaccine doses are less likely to catch the respiratory virus that the Center for Disease Control estimates ...
University of Rochester Medical Center to begin HIV study Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
all 3 news articles »  ROCM
CCHD offering vaccines through National Influenza Week
Jacksonville Daily Progress, TX -
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has designated the week after Thanksgiving, Nov. 27 to Dec. 2, as National Influenza Vaccination Week, ...
It's time again to get yearly flu vaccine El Paso Times
all 2 news articles »

Javno.hr
Hopes for AIDS Vaccine Still Alive Despite Setbacks
Washington Post, United States -
... flu strains circulating globally each year, according to Wayne Koff, senior vice president of research and development at the International AIDS Vaccine ...
World AIDS Day 2008 recap Scientist Live
all 38 news articles »
Health Tip: Be Sure to Get a Flu Shot
Washington Post, United States -
These include health-care workers and people who take care of children aged 6 months or younger. The latter are too young to be vaccinated.

BBC News
Hospital beds boost over winter
BBC News, UK -
Other measures include a ?14m annual flu vaccine campaign and ?30m plans to deal with delayed hospital discharges. Dr Woods also said extra nurses and ...
Intensive care beds boost The Press Association
all 19 news articles »

NECN
Study: It's wise for college students to get flu shot
NECN, MA -
But new research from the University of Minnesota suggests the flu vaccine has some big payoffs for all students. Researchers followed nearly 13000 students ...
Reminding readers to get flu vaccination shot
Brazil Times, IN -
Vaccination programs have started in many areas and will continue through March when the influenza virus peaks. If you need to get a flu shot, ...
New record set in mass dispensing exercise
Heber Springs Sun-Times, AR -
Children six months through five years of age should receive the flu vaccine due to the increased probability of severe illness in this age group. ...
Flu shots a tough sell to some health care workers
North County Times, CA - Nov 30, 2008
And, he said, there's the "myth" that you can get flu from the vaccine. The CDC recommends that health care facilities offer free flu vaccines to employees ...
Flu Shots: Health care workers must step up to protect patients
The Post-Standard - Syracuse.com, NY -
Not one staff member of the Evergreen Heights adult home in Weedsport was vaccinated during the 2006-2007 season. The flu is highly contagious and may cause ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: new + flu + cdc  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


KGWN
FDA OKs Flu Vaccines for 2008-09 Season
Washington Post, United States - 40 minutes ago
Jernigan said last spring that the CDC was involved in promoting better surveillance of emerging flu viruses in East Asia and Southeast Asia. ...
FDA Approves 2008-2009 Flu Vaccines FDA.gov
New decision model seeks to avert flu vaccine mismatch of 2007 ... PhysOrg.com
Flu vaccines approved for next season Reuters
all 29 news articles »

Oneindia
Experts: Pneumonia Was Real Killer in 1918 Flu Pandemic
FOXNews -
Government efforts to prepare for a modern day influenza pandemic should include a stockpile of antibiotics because bacteria, not the flu virus, ...
Bacteria, not influenza, were real killers in 1918 flu pandemic Thaindian.com
all 14 news articles »

Wall Street Journal
For the Meningococcal Vaccine
Wall Street Journal -
A healthy teenager comes down with what seems like the flu, then gets rapidly weaker, spikes a high fever, starts vomiting and breaks out in a rash. ...
Meningitis vaccinations urged Honolulu Star-Bulletin
all 5 news articles »
National Quality Forum Endorses National Consensus Standards ...
MarketWatch -
The NQF portfolio already includes facility-level cancer and perioperative care measures, which are expanded and enriched by this new clinician-level ...

ScienceMode
Vaccines Approved for Flu Season
ScienceMode - 38 minutes ago
The CDC says an average of 5 to 20 percent of the US population gets the flu annually. Of those, more than 200000 are hospitalized from flu complications ...
New Flu-Fighting Strategy
Chemical & Engineering News - Aug 3, 2008
The work could help researchers design a new class of flu treatments. X-ray crystal structure of a critical interface in avian flu virus's RNA polymerase. ...
Flu jabs for under-fives could reduce all infections by two-thirds
Independent, UK -
By Jeremy Laurance Vaccinating children against flu may be an effective way of protecting the rest of the population, researchers have concluded. ...
Q&A: Flu vaccine for children Telegraph.co.uk
Calls for flu shots for children to protect the rest of the population News-Medical.net
Flu jab for children 'would also protect adults' Pulse
OnMedica - Nursing Times
all 197 news articles »
Indonesia reports new H5N1 death
CIDRAP, MN - Aug 4, 2008
Aug 4, 2008 (CIDRAP News) ? An official from Indonesia's health ministry recently confirmed that a 19-year-old man died from an H5N1 avian influenza ...
Amanda Peet, Here's an Idea for Your Next X-Files Movie
Age of Autism, Trumbull -
The CDC paid the Institute of Medicine to conduct a new study to whitewash the risks of thimerosal, ordering researchers to "rule out" the chemical's link ...
'The disease does not spread like flu'
Electric New Paper, Singapore - 42 minutes ago
John (not his real name) told The New Paper: 'My employer told me that the school had received an anonymous tip-off about my ailment and that the principal ...
Source: Google News

Prevention and control of influenza: recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization … -
NM Smith, JS Bresee, DK Shay, TM Uyeki, NJ Cox, RA … - MMWR Recomm Rep, 2006 - archives.hellis.org
... use of influenza vaccine and antiviral agents (CDC. Prevention and control of influenza:
recommendations of ... The 2006 recommendations include new and updated ...

Characterization of the Reconstructed 1918 Spanish Influenza Pandemic Virus -
TM Tumpey, CF Basler, PV Aguilar, H Zeng, A … - Science, 2005 - sciencemag.org
... (Academic Press, New York, 1975), pp. 483?538. ... [Abstract/Free Full Text]. 15. Interim
CDC-NIH Recommendation (www.cdc.gov/flu/h2n2bsl3.htm). 16. ...

Prevention and control of influenza. Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization … -
CB Bridges, K Fukuda, TM Uyeki, NJ Cox, JA … - MMWR Recomm Rep, 2003 - Mass Med Soc
... on Immunization Practices (ACIP) of the CDC has comprehensively ... the recommendations
for the 2002 flu season ... A new recommendation states that vaccination against ...

Cruise Ships: High-Risk Passengers and the Global Spread of New Influenza Viruses -
JM Miller, TWS Tam, S Maloney, K Fukuda, N Cox, J … - Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2000 - UChicago Press
... The CDC cultured all 33 NPSs for influenza virus and performed influenza ... from 1
passenger on cruise 2 was tested for influenza A virus at a New York City ...

VIROLOGY: Enhanced: The Origin and Control of Pandemic Influenza -
G Laver, E Garman - Science, 2001 - sciencemag.org
... The CDC's National Vaccine Program Office provides information about the ... and E.
Pelletier titled "The influenza A/New Jersey (swine flu) vaccine and ...

[PDF] Influenza pandemics of the 20th century -
ED Kilbourne - Emerg Infect Dis, 2006 - 0-www.cdc.gov.mill1.sjlibrary.org
... Influenza Pandemics of the 20th Century Edwin D. Kilbourne* Emerging Infectious
Diseases ? www.cdc.gov/eid ? Vol. 12, No. 1, January 2006 9 *New York ...
-

-
R Snacken, AP Kendal, LR Haaheim, JM Wood - Emerg Infect Dis, 1999 - cdc.gov
... In 1997, the Hong Kong authorities set a new standard in ... about influenza in the United
States (http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/diseases/flu/weekly.htm); and ...
-

Influenza and Cardiovascular Disease A New Opportunity for Prevention and the Need for Further … -
M Madjid, M Naghavi, S Litovsky, SW Casscells - Circulation, 2003 - Am Heart Assoc
... Are new trials needed? After all, it is already clear that influenza vaccines save
lives ... broadest guidelines of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) state that ...

Avian influenza: a new pandemic threat -
A Trampuz, RM Prabhu, TF Smith, LM Baddour - Mayo Clin Proc, 2004 - mayoclinicproceedings.com
... A global outbreak of influenza usually occurs when a new influenza virus emerges,
spreads, and causes disease ... Available at: www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/index.htm. ...
-

[PDF] Syndromic surveillance in public health practice, New York City. -
R Heffernan, F Mostashari, D Das, A Karpati, M … - Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2004 - cdc.gov
... This signal provided the earliest indica- tion of communitywide influenza activity
in New York RESEARCH 860 Emerging Infectious Diseases ? www.cdc.gov/eid ...
-

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CDC: Flu Vaccine Ready for New Season

September 1, 2005 08:40:43 PM PST
By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Sept. 1 (HealthDay News) -- Trying to avoid a repeat of last year's flu vaccine shortage, U.S. health officials on Thursday announced that four manufacturers are slated to produce a total of up to 97 million doses of the vaccine in time for the upcoming season.

However, the officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stressed that "because of the uncertainties regarding production of influenza vaccine, the exact number of available doses and timing of vaccine distribution for the 2005-06 season remain unknown."

In an update to be published Friday in the CDC journal Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the agency reported that the bulk of new flu vaccines -- 60 million doses -- will come from drug maker Sanofi Pasteur, Inc.

Another 18 to 26 million doses are expected from Chiron Corporation. Officials from that company announced Wednesday that its British facility, which was closed last year because of tainted flu vaccines, had this year passed U.S. regulatory inspection. That put the company on track to return its flu vaccine to the U.S. market this winter.

Manufacturers GlaxoSmithKline and MedImmune Vaccines, Inc., are also slated to supply 8 million and 3 million doses of vaccine, respectively, according to the CDC.

Still, given "uncertainties" in production and distribution, the CDC is advising that specific groups get priority when it comes to receiving their flu shot before October 24.

These groups include: all individuals aged 65 or over (especially those suffering from chronic illness), children between 6 to 23 months of age, pregnant women, health care workers, other children and adults with chronic illness, and anyone living with or caring for children under 6 months of age.

All Americans should be eligible to receive a flu shot after October 24, the CDC say.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced the approval of GlaxoSmithKline's new flu vaccine, Fluarix, further brightening the outlook for the upcoming flu season.

This additional form of vaccine should help ensure that this flu season goes more smoothly than the last, when Chiron -- one of the two major U.S. distributors -- announced the collapse of its intended supply because of manufacturing problems at its British plant.

U.S. government officials were enthusiastic with not only the availability of the new vaccine, but also the way the approval process went.

"Previous shortages highlighted the need for additional influenza vaccine manufacturers for the U.S. market," FDA Commissioner Lester Crawford said in a news release. "Accelerated approval has allowed us to evaluate and approve Fluarix in record time so that we can make available additional safe and effective flu vaccines."

"Having more manufacturers of influenza vaccine licensed in the U.S., and having more vaccine dosages, is critical to public health, and I applaud FDA for taking such quick action to obtain and evaluate the data needed to license Fluarix in time for this year's influenza season," Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt said in a statement.

Those in the health-care industry are breathing a sigh of relief as well.

"It's reassuring to us that a large company is in vaccine production," said Dr. Steven Christianson, medical director of the Visiting Nurse Service of New York. "This year, we're looking at the vaccine supply being probably what's needed. Glaxo is a large company, and their putting vaccine into supply, as well as other companies, makes it much less likely that something as terrible as happened last year will happen again."

The nursing service co-sponsors free flu vaccine clinics with the New York City Department of Health.

Sanofi Pasteur, a longstanding vaccine supplier to the United States, said its projected 60 million doses total "2 million more than we produced last year," and about 10 million more doses than the company produced in the 2003-04 season, according to company spokesman John Abrams.

"Because of last year's surprise, the company decided to go ahead and manufacture extra doses," Abrams explained. The 60 million doses are completely pre-booked, he added, and the company has made sure that organizations handling high-risk individuals will be well-stocked.

As to Chiron, company officials said FDA inspectors found the company's changes "generally acceptable" at the end of their nine-day review. They added that its production of Fluvirin was already underway at the Liverpool plant.

"It's premature to put a number on the actual supply for next year because manufacturing is continuing, and there are still some uncertainties with respect to Chiron, but we are very encouraged by being able to license this new vaccine, and also I think Chiron has reached a significant milestone in terms of their recent FDA inspection," said Dr. Jesse Goodman, director of the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. "We're encouraged by the positive track they're on, although the assessment is ongoing. The bottom line is it's encouraging. We certainly are hopeful that there will be additional vaccine beyond what was available last year."

Last season, the government initially planned to have 100 million doses of flu vaccine available before Chiron Inc. announced problems with its manufacturing process.

The U.S. government managed to patch together a supply of about 60 million doses, some of which consisted of Fluarix, made by GlaxoSmithKline in its German plant.

Last season, Fluarix was made available under an investigational new drug application. This season, Fluarix was approved using the FDA's accelerated approval process, which allows products treating serious or life-threatening illnesses to be approved using surrogate endpoints that can be evaluated more rapidly. In other words, the company was able to demonstrate that Fluarix made levels of protective antibodies in the blood that are likely to be effective in preventing flu. GlaxoSmithKline will do further studies to verify the benefits of the vaccine.

Fluarix is the first vaccine approved using the accelerated approval process, the FDA reported. This year's supply of the vaccine is also manufactured by Glaxo's German plant.

Influenza is a serious public health problem each year. In the United States, an estimated 200,000 people are hospitalized with the flu, and about 36,000 die from the disease.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on the flu.

Health Tip: Are You at Risk for Testicular Cancer?

September 1, 2005 08:40:43 PM PST

Testicular cancer, which usually strikes men ages 15 to 34, is one of the most common tumors seen in men under age 40, according to Seton Hall University in New Jersey.

All men in this age group should conduct monthly self-exams, especially those who may be more prone to testicular cancer.

The following factors may increase your risk:

  • You are a white male between the ages of 15 and 40.
  • You have undescended or late-descended testes.
  • There is a family history of testicular cancer.
  • You've been diagnosed with inguinal hernia.

 

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