15.11.2009
Des morts à la suite de la vaccination H1n1 en Chine
En chine, quelques morts à la suite de la vaccination H1n1. Rappelons que H1N1 a touché 22 millions de personnes dans des pays sous développés et qu'H1n1 a fait environ 5000 morts!!!
L'info chinoise n'est pas allarmante.
By
ALICE PARK Alice Park
1 hr 41 mins ago
Chinese
health officials reported on Friday the first deaths in people who received the
H1N1 vaccine. The Ministry
of Health
announced that the two people, including one teacher from Hunan
province, died hours after receiving their inoculations. Since September, when
the Ministry began its H1N1 immunization program, 12 million Chinese have
received the pandemic
flu
shot.
A preliminary autopsy revealed that the teacher died of an apparent heart attack while playing basketball, and a Ministry spokesperson told the China Daily newspaper that the death was "a coincidental medical incident" and not related to the vaccine. No details on the second victim have been released so far.
As
they conduct an autopsy investigation into the second death, Chinese health
officials have pulled all vaccines manufactured in the same batch used to
inoculate the teacher. Although the H1N1 vaccine has been rigorously tested and
vetted for safety, no inoculation can be considered 100% safe and may cause
adverse
events,
including death, in some people.
Taking
an aggressive approach to the pandemic flu, back in June the Chinese
government
asked 11 biotech companies to develop a pandemic
H1N1 vaccine. Beijing-based Sinovac succeeded in developing the world's first
approved swine flu
shot.
The company raced to conduct clinical
trials,
and was the first to report that a single dose of vaccine, instead of the two
doses that most flu experts had believed would be necessary, was sufficient to
protect against 2009 H1N1. In early September, China
became the first country to begin swine flu inoculations.
But
by the end of October, 54% of Chinese residents reported in a China Daily
survey that they would not get the H1N1 vaccine because of concerns about the
shot's safety. That prompted the director of the World
Health Organization's
Beijing office, Dr. Michael O'Leary, to tell the newspaper, "The H1N1 vaccine is
one of the safest vaccines being used. When it's available to me, I would not
hesitate to get the vaccine developed and produced by China." (Read
"H1N1: Hitting the Young, Riskier for the Old")
Three
vaccine manufacturers in China, including Sinovac, have received orders from the
government for more than 34 million doses. Among the 12 million inoculated so
far, 1,235 have complained of side effects, ranging from sore arms, rashes, and
headaches, to anaphylactic
shock
and sudden drops in blood
pressure.
While
the Chinese government has been criticized for its draconian public
health response
to swine flu - using quarantines, canceling school and detaining entire
planeloads of people when a single passenger appears to have flulike symptoms -
the country's officials say the strict measures helped stem the spread of flu.
So far, China reports about 36 deaths and 62,800 H1N1 cases - compared with U.S.
government estimates of 4,000 American deaths and 22 million infections. China
plans to immunize 65 million citizens, or 5% of the country's population, by the
end of the year. As in the U.S., health officials are targeting high priority
groups first, including the military, police, health-care workers, teachers,
students and those with chronic
diseases.








