Oct. 28, Nov. 4 flu clinics for students only

Oct. 28, Nov. 4 flu clinics for students only


By Nok-Noi Ricker
BDN Staff

BANGOR, Maine — A large shipment of seasonal and H1N1 flu vaccines — sent to Maine as part of a federal program to inoculate the state’s youth — arrived in Bangor last week, and a free flu shot clinic for area pre-kindergarten through grade 12 students is scheduled for Wednesday at the Bangor Civic Center.

“It’s only for schoolchildren and it’s targeted for the school systems that are [close to] to Bangor,” said Shawn Yardley, the city’s health and human services director.

The student-only flu clinic will be open 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28. A second clinic will be held during the same hours on Wednesday, Nov. 4., also at the civic center.

“With higher reports of positive tests, we just wanted to get it out into the population as quickly as possible,” Yardley said Sunday, adding that both the seasonal flu and H1N1 vaccinations are recommended.

Bangor Regional Health and Community Services is working with the school departments and will be administering the shots.

“We are highly encouraging all eligible families to take advantage of this very important public and personal health precaution,” Yardley said.

Students from Bangor, Brewer, Dedham, Orrington, SAD 22, SAD 63, RSU 14 and RSU 26 may participate in the two clinics. SAD 22 comprises Hampden, Newburgh and Winterport; RSU 14 represents Hermon, Carmel and Levant; and RSU 26 comprises Orono, Veazie and Glenburn.

John Bapst Memorial High School and All Saints Catholic School in Bangor also are participating, but Bangor Christian Schools, which got its own supply of vaccines, is hosting its own clinic, Yardley said.

“Schoolchildren from outside of these areas should check with their schools for the progress of their [flu clinic] programs,” Yardley said.

Each school participating in the coming clinics in Bangor will send home notices today, with specifics about permission slips and busing arrangements, which differ depending on school department.

For example, “John Bapst and All Saints are going to be busing their kids to the clinics,” and are requiring signed permission slips from parents be signed ahead of time.

Bangor and Brewer school districts are requiring that a parent or guardian accompany students under 18 to sign permission forms for one or both shots to be administered. Neither Bangor nor Brewer schools will provide transportation to the clinics.

The regional school departments applied for and received federal stimulus funds sent to Maine specifically for the student flu clinics, Brewer Superintendent Daniel Lee said Saturday.

“We’re all sending our school nurses there and any supplies we’ve received so far” to help out, he said.

“We’re getting these vaccines through the Maine [Center for Disease Control] and the Maine Department of Education,” Bangor schools Superintendent Betsy Webb said. “Each school district had to apply” for the flu shot funding.

For that reason, the vaccines are only for students in the partnering school departments, Lee said.

“Supplies are limited,” he said.

The state has applied for enough vaccine to vaccinate around two-thirds of the state’s student population, Yardley said.

The shipment that arrived last week in Bangor is substantial, but “we don’t have enough if every student shows up,” he said. “Our hope is between now and the 4th [of November] we’ll have additional supplies. We have more on order, and the promise of more to come.”

Dr. Dora Anne Mills, director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, issued letters to school departments statewide in July, asking them to consider participating in the program.

At first each school district worked independently, but it quickly became apparent to area school leaders that a partnership was the best option, Lee said.

Influenza is on the increase, and H1N1, which was first detected in Maine during April 2009, “has been the predominant influenza virus found in Maine” since then, according to the health advisory “Widespread Influenza Activity in Maine” issued Oct. 22 through the Maine Health Alert Network.

Since April, Maine has seen 487 confirmed or probable cases of H1N1, according to the CDC’s weekly update “Maine Weekly Influenza Surveillance Report,” posted online Wednesday. Of those, 16 residents have been hospitalized, and one death has occurred.

The Maine CDC stresses that people at highest risk, primarily children and pregnant women, should be vaccinated for H1N1.

The national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that certain higher-risk groups get the 2009 H1N1 vaccine.

“These target groups include pregnant women, people who live with or care for children younger than 6 months of age, health care and emergency medical services personnel, persons between the ages of 6 months and 24 years old, and people ages 25 through 64 years of age who are at higher risk for 2009 H1N1 because of chronic health disorders or compromised immune systems,” the CDC’s Web site says.

“Any immunity from 2009 H1N1 influenza infection or vaccination will not provide protection against seasonal influenza,” the site says. “All people who want protection from seasonal flu should still get their seasonal influenza vaccine.”

While H1N1 vaccine supplies are now limited, public health officials recommend that eventually everyone should have both the seasonal and H1N1 vaccines. Seasonal influenza is typically most deadly for the elderly and chronically ill, and H1N1 hits pregnant women, children and young adults hardest.

To notify students and their parents about the coming clinics, Brewer sent out an Immediate Response Information System, or IRIS, alert Saturday to give parents time to make arrangements.

“This is short notice,” Lee said.

A notice about the flu clinics is already posted on the Bangor School Department’s Web site, bangorschools.net, and is expected to be posted online today at the Brewer and Dedham school departments’ Web sites, breweredu.org and dedhamme.org, and others.

Information on influenza in Maine is available at www.maine.gov/dhhs/boh/maineflu.

nricker@bangordailynews.net

990-8190

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Comments
17 comments on this item

Hmmmm...and most teens don't ask for parental approval before becoming sexually active. Wouldn't it be a better world if all boys had to have their parent's approval before schtupping? Since THAT'S not going to happen, I'm glad they have access to birth control!

Is it exclusively for students enrolled in either Bangor or Brewer, or might other schoolchildren participate?

And they have to get permission from there momma or dadda

<

Try reading the article instead of the headline...all the way to the 7th paragraph is tough going I suppose.

Neither our school nurse nor our pediatrician's office is able to provide information on the status of their clinic dates, much to the frustration of themselves and parents. Would these children be turned away?

This is the worst way imaginable to administer flu shots to area school children. No schedules for classes, parents have to take time off to take their kids and stand in line for who knows how long. Almost all other districs are giving them at the schools, why can't they be bothered?

"The state has applied for enough vaccine to vaccinate around two-thirds of the state’s student population..." Which third does the State intend to omit? What will they tell the parents of those children?

Muguet, please read the article again with special emphasis on paragraph 7

1,2,3,4,5,6,.....7!

it will answer all your questions.

No cal I don't, but what I do find odd is every other flu ever gone around takes a year for them to get it shot made up. I find it complete B.S. that this is a state of an emergency, and you can't get a shot cause there "ain't" enough to go around.

I f people would wash their hands and cover thier faces guess what this flu stuff wouldn't spread.

I saw a poll taken that 80% of the men don't wash their hands after going to the bathroom, (women weren't mentioned but I'll bet 40% or more). Just how gross is that, but here's a thought wash them then or eat it later.

While I am eternally grateful for your insights, "paragraph 7" has failed to satisfy my curiosity. During the vaccine shortage caused by tainted doses several years ago, my own high-risk family memebers went without protection despite my best efforts to obtain doses. According to the CBC, Canada has enough doses for all of its citizens, a policy our own leaders simply do not share. Vaccine supply for a mere percentage of the population is apparently a matter of routine. I am well aware of the amount of time necessary to produce vaccine, logistics etc. Again, our family finds ourselves in high-risk categories with no information from our school, doctor or government on when, or even "if" vaccine will be made available to us.

I'm incredibly frustrated because my 23 year old daughter is 7 months pregnant and can't get the vaccine anywhere. She gets the flu EVERY year and is very sick with it. More often than not she actually gets it twice. Pregnant women are actually the highest risk group yet the pregnant women in Bangor don't have access to the H1N1 vaccine.

Centaurmyst, who is your daughters PCP and OB? Does she live locally here in Eastern Maine?

muguet, you do know that the population of Canada is 1/10 of the US right?

Has anyone done serious, in-depth research on this? I got a letter home today from my child's school stating that they would bussing children over promptly leaving @ 9:05am. While I think my children (ages 9 and 3) should be protected (and yes they know enough to wash their hands, and cover their faces - yes, even at 3 years old), will washing hands and covering faces be enough? Will injecting my child with mercury, chicken enzymes, thimerosal, etc (http://answers.flu.gov/questions/4801) be worth it? Are my children one of the 1 or 2 in 100,000 that will get Guillain-Barre syndrome aka GBS (http://answers.flu.gov/questions/4205 -- AS WELL AS OTHER LINKS ON THIS SPECIFIC PAGE). Is this a 100% pandemic, or is there a lot of hype surrounding it, making it far worse than it is.

The letter did list 3 websites:

www.maineflu.gov

www.flu.gov

www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/parents

hopefully these will be of help to some of you out there. I'm obviously conflicted.

I'm in line with my 2 kids at 7am. Why in God's name would you take the chance?? Forget work, forget school, this takes precedence.

sectar....her OB/GYN has been trying to get the H1N1 vaccine because they want all their patients to to get it. They are based right on the EMMC campus. They still don't have the vaccine. We are going to call them again today and see if they have it. I have called the coordinator of all the Bangor area clinics and was told they want to try to get all pregnant women vaccinated but there are no specific plans at this point. We're on top of trying to get her vaccinated. I also have a 9 year old daughter who I might take to get the H1N1 vaccine, but I'm not sure I should at this point. She is almost 10 and has never had the flu in her life. Her sister and brother get it every year and she is exposed to it in pretty close quarters and never catches it. I think they give the nasal vaccine to kids which has live virus in it. Since my pregnant daughter can't get vaccinated yet I don't know if I should risk putting the live virus in my 9 year old to give her immunity because I don't know if it can put her older sister at risk.

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