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 Vaccinate All School Children Against Flu: Experts Say

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PostSubject: Vaccinate All School Children Against Flu: Experts Say    Vaccinate All School Children Against Flu: Experts Say  Icon_minitimeFri 20 Jul 2012, 11:01


Vaccinate All School Children Against Flu: Experts Say





All children should be vaccinated against flu from the age of five
to stop them spreading the illness among their families, government
advisers have said.






Vaccinate All School Children Against Flu: Experts Say  School_2233358b


Children already receive 12 jabs against eight diseases by the time they start school Photo: Alamy


Under the plans a new
universal vaccination programme could start in the autumn of 2014
with a nasal spray vaccine, called Fluenz, that avoids the use of
needles.

Schoolchildren from the age of five would
be vaccinated every year. Currently only children with serious
long-term illnesses are given the seasonal flu jab.

A panel of independent experts which advises
the government believes the move could save lives and stop flu
spreading through the general population.

The panel is in the final stages of
evaluating research on vaccinating schoolchildren before formally
recommending the expansion of the programme.

Parents were clamouring for flu jabs for
their children last year when thousands were still falling ill from
the H1N1 swine flu virus but were told they could not have it on the
NHS as the vaccine was in short supply.

According to the minutes of a meeting of the
Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation last month,
vaccinating children would be both "cost effective" and prevent
serious illness in adults.

The minutes state: "Members considered that an extension of the annual
influenza vaccination programme should include school-aged children."

Dr George Kassianos, spokesman on immunisation for the Royal College of
GPs, told GP magazine that the advisors support for expanding the
immunisation programme was ‘extremely welcome’.

"It will be beneficial to children and will benefit other patients as
well," he said. "If we can reduce the infection rate among children we
can reduce the morbidity and death rate in the community generally,
and especially among the elderly."

A study published last year found that immunising healthy children would
prevent eight in ten flu infections and free up 790,000 GP
appointments a year.

The minutes show the committee, which includes leading paediatricians,
said the programme would be cost effective but there are not enough
school nurses to implement it at present.

It was warned that such a programme would be received with 'very mixed
opinions by parents' and that health professionals could also object.

The committee said it would produce recommendations, which are binding on the Department of Health, at its next meeting.

The new vaccine, made by AstraZeneca, was licensed in December and
contains three strains of flu. It is made using hens' eggs so cannot
be given to children with a known severe allergy.

It is given in two doses four weeks apart and listed side effects include headache, loss of appetite, fever and muscle pain.


Children already receive 12 jabs against eight diseases by the time they start school.

All seasonal flu vaccines must be updated annually to match the three most common strains of the disease in circulation.

Pregnant women were added to the seasonal flu vaccination programme in
2010 after they were disproportionately affected by the H1N1 swine
flu pandemic.

Elderly people over the age of 65, people with long-term conditions of
any age and people in care homes and their carers and healthcare
workers should be vaccinated annually against flu.

Jackie Fletcher, founder of Jabs campaign group, said: "I can understand
targeting particularly vulnerable individuals but to vaccinate all
four to 16-year-olds in close quarters at school is a perfect way to
spread the disease according to the literature."

Prof Ian Jones, Professor of Virology, University of Reading, said:
“Vaccinating all school children, regardless of whether they are high
risk or not, has been discussed before and was an option when
pandemic flu appeared to be targeting the young.

“There is very strong evidence of benefits from vaccinating all children
as not only does it protect the vaccinated child, but it also
benefits society generally as children act as ‘superspreaders’.

"There are many safety tests that are gone through and this particular
vaccine has been used extensively in the US. It’s also extremely
unlikely that there could be any issue of ‘over-vaccinating’ as it is
a nasal spray."

Prof Adam Finn, Professor of Paediatrics, University of Bristol Medical
School, said: “The catalyst for this interest is the arrival of a new
nasal flu vaccine, which is very easy to give and is licensed for
children from age two. There are, essentially no safety concerns
about the nasal flu vaccine.

“The only country in Europe that is giving universal childhood
vaccinations is Finland. There they are using the old injected
vaccine but uptake is not great. Most of the data and experience
comes from the USA. The Japanese took this approach for a long time
but then gave up in the late 1980s / early 1990s.

“We are currently doing a series of studies in Bristol on acceptability,
cost-benefit and the impact of such a proposal. My impression is
that there is a need for more research before a decision is made.”

“Each year the World Health Organisation will still advise which mix of
flu strains need to be protected against, so this will not do away
with the need for regular updates.”

The panel is expected to make a statement to the Department of Health on the plans next month.
A Department of Health spokesman said: "The Joint Committee on
Vaccination and Immunisation has said it is unable at this stage to
recommend an extension of the flu vaccination programme as there are a
number of issues that it believes need further consideration, for
example the public response to such a programme.

"Extending the vaccination programme to healthy children would be a huge
undertaking, increasing the number of people who get the vaccine, so
it is important that we get this decision absolutely right.

"In the meantime, we continue to recommend that people in at risk
groups, 65s and over and pregnant women do get vaccinated — they are
the most at risk from suffering complications. The JCVI is clear that
is the current priority.”


Source:-
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9297345/Vaccinate-all-school-children-against-flu-experts.html
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