World 
              Health Organization and CDC Present H1N1 Swine Flu Updates
              
              
                
                 
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                        | SUMMARY: 
                          Both the World Health Organization (WHO) and the U.S. 
                          Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently 
                          provided updates on the status of 2009 H1N1 influenza 
                          A, commonly known as "swine flu." The flu 
                          outbreak has slowed, both nationwide and globally, but 
                          nevertheless remains widespread. |  |  |  | 
                 
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              Below 
                is an excerpt from the Kaiser Family Foundation's Kaiser Daily 
                Global Health Policy Report from January 19, 2010, describing 
                the latest developments.
                
                WHO, CDC Issue H1N1 Updates
                
              
                 
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                        | H1N1 
                          vaccination rates for pregnant women in the U.S. were 
                          higher than seasonal flu vaccination rates for pregnant 
                          women. |  | 
              
              Though 
                H1N1 (swine flu) activity worldwide has slowed, the potential 
                of a new wave of infections in the northern hemisphere in late 
                winter or early spring remains viable, Keiji Fukuda, the WHO's 
                top flu expert, said Monday at the start of the WHO's weeklong 
                executive board meeting, Reuters 
                reports. The H1N1 pandemic "initially sparked widespread 
                concern about antiviral and vaccine supplies, especially in developing 
                countries, but many nations have cut back their vaccine orders 
                recently because the pandemic has not turned out as deadly as 
                originally feared," the news service writes (Nebehay, 1/18).
                
                The number of deaths from H1N1 since March 2009 reached nearly 
                14,000, "up from the 12,799 the U.N. health agency reported 
                last week," CBC 
                News reports (1/15).
                
                Reuters 
                reports on the WHO's latest updates on the deaths worldwide 
                from H1N1 and the countries that continue to experience widespread 
                H1N1 transmission in a second story. "[T]he WHO also said 
                that while India's infections may have peaked in December, neighboring 
                Nepal and Sri Lanka were still experiencing widespread transmission," 
                the news service writes. "Morocco, Algeria and Egypt are 
                continuing to see the active spread of H1N1 and some countries 
                in Europe, including Romania, Ukraine, Turkey and Switzerland, 
                are also reporting moderately intense rates of respiratory disease, 
                the U.N. agency said." 
                
                The H1N1 virus continues to be the main flu virus in Europe, northern 
                Africa and parts of Asia, including China, with few reports of 
                the seasonal flu, the U.N. added (MacInnis, 1/15).
                
                Bloomberg/Seattle 
                Times examines how the governments of several countries are 
                working to rid themselves of H1N1 vaccine surpluses as demand 
                for the vaccine declined. "Many are selling or donating the 
                excess or slashing pending orders," the news service writes. 
                The article includes information on the growing anger in Germany 
                and France over the amount of money the government spent on vaccines 
                that may never be used and the criticisms by some that the WHO 
                exaggerate the severity of the pandemic to serve the interests 
                of the pharmaceutical industry (Gerlin, 1/17). 
                
                Amid such criticisms, WHO Director-General Margaret Chan on Monday 
                defended the agency's response to the pandemic during the WHO 
                board meeting, VOA 
                News reports. "Dr. Chan says it is always better to err 
                on the side of caution when dealing with public health issues," 
                the news service writes. "She says it is better to have a 
                moderate pandemic with a large supply of vaccines, rather than 
                a severe pandemic with inadequate supplies of vaccine," according 
                to VOA News (Schlein, 1/18).
                
                Chan added that the world has been fortunate so far that the H1N1 
                pandemic has been moderate, Xinhua/CRIENGLISH.com 
                reports. "The best health news of the previous decade is 
                the fact that the long overdue influenza pandemic has been so 
                moderate in its impact ... We have remained fortunate up to now," 
                Chan said. Chan also noted the international community's response 
                to H1N1 (1/19). 
                
                CDC Updates Recent Numbers Of Americans Affected By H1N1 
                
                
                An estimated 11,000 Americans died from H1N1 since the virus emerged 
                in April 2009, according to the CDC, the New 
                York Times reports. The newspaper notes: "The estimate 
                by the World Health Organization as of Jan. 3 was 12,799 deaths 
                worldwide," however, "[t]he two numbers are not directly 
                comparable because the WHO counts only laboratory-confirmed deaths. 
                Only a small fraction of all flu cases are tested by laboratories, 
                especially in poor and middle-income countries, and many deaths 
                that the flu causes are officially given other reasons, like pneumonia 
                or heart failure" (McNeil, 1/16).
                
                The release of the CDC's latest H1N1 statistics on Friday also 
                revealed that up 80 million Americans could been infected by the 
                H1N1 virus, and more than 360,000 people could have been hospitalized, 
                Reuters 
                reports in a third story (Fox, 1/15).
                
                "About 1 in 5 Americans have been vaccinated against swine 
                flu, according to the government's first detailed estimates of 
                vaccination rates against the new pandemic," the Associated 
                Press/TIME reports. The report, based on two telephone interviews 
                conducted in December and early January, found that an estimated 
                61 million received the H1N1 vaccine, according to the news service. 
                
                
                The report "shows that vaccination rates were a bit higher 
                for people deemed to be especially vulnerable to the new influenza, 
                including pregnant women, children and people with underlying 
                health conditions. About 28 percent of the 160 million in those 
                targeted groups got vaccine. The report also offered a specific 
                estimate for children - about 29 percent of children ages 6 months 
                through 18 years were vaccinated, CDC officials reported," 
                the news service writes (Stobbe, 1/15).
                
                1/22/10
              Source
                Kaiser Family Foundation. WHO, 
                CDC Issue H1N1 Updates. Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy 
                Report. January 19, 2010.