Title: AH1N1 Swine Flu
1A/H1N1(Swine Flu)
What To Expect
Photo credits CDC Laboratory
2Todays Meeting
- Status of the pandemic Characteristics of H1N1
- Status of vaccine development production
- Antiviral use
- CDC School Guidance and Recommendations
- Priorities if it gets worse than expected
- Actions Public Health is taking
- Surveillance
- Additional Resources
- Answers to your questions
3Why are we concerned about this H1N1 Flu Virus?
- This virus contains genetic sequences of the
deadly 1918 flu it is a 4th generation
descendent. - The 1918 killer flu has never gone away (it did
disappear from 1957 to 1975). - Its back having undergone complex genetic
re-assortment with other swine and avian viruses
- it has recently acquired the ability to easily
infect and be passed between humans. - And we have very little immunity to it.
4And there is more
- This virus was much more virulent in Mexico than
in the US or Canada we dont yet know why. - The age distribution of those infected is
strikingly similar to its 1918 predecessor most
are children and young adults very different
from the seasonal flu - In Mexico it demonstrated the ability to cause
major lung damage w/resulting pneumonia among the
young and healthy .
5Status of the Pandemic
- International Situation
- Circulating worldwide (170 countries)
- Epidemiologically similar across countries
- WHO reports 177,457 lab-confirmed cases
including 1,462 deaths (case fatality 0.8) - Gross underestimation of total cases
- A(H1N1) is dominant flu virus in U.S., England,
S. Africa, New Zealand, Australia, Chile,
Argentina and Brazil. - Remains relatively mild
6International Situation
7Status of the Pandemic
- United States Situation
- All states reporting at least sporadic activity
- Epidemiologically similar to international cases
- 7,511 total hospitalizations 477 total deaths
- Estimated 1 million US cases April-June
- Outbreaks in gt50 summer camps
- A(H1N1) is 98 of US flu viruses sub-typed
- Flu activity decreased the first week of Aug.
- A (H1N1) will co-circulate with seasonal flu this
fall/winter
8United States Situation
9United States Situation
INFLUENZA ISOLATES FROM THE HHS REGION VI (AR,
LA, NM, OK, TX) Reported By WHO/NREVSS
Collaborating Laboratories2008-2009 Season
INFLUENZA ISOLATES FROM THE HHS REGION VI (AR,
LA, NM, OK, TX) Reported By WHO/NREVSS
Collaborating Laboratories2008-2009 Season
10United States Situation
INFLUENZA ISOLATES FROM THE HHS REGION VI (AR,
LA, NM, OK, TX) Reported By WHO/NREVSS
Collaborating Laboratories2008-2009 Season
11United States Situation
12United States Situation
Percentage of Visits for Influenza-like Illness
(ILI) Reported by the U.S. Outpatient
Influenza-like Illness Surveillance Network
(ILINet), National Summary 2008-2009 and Previous
Two Seasons
INFLUENZA ISOLATES FROM THE HHS REGION VI (AR,
LA, NM, OK, TX) Reported By WHO/NREVSS
Collaborating Laboratories2008-2009 Season
13Signs and symptoms
- Symptoms of novel H1N1 flu are similar to those
of seasonal flu. - Fever
- Cough
- Sore throat
- Runny or stuffy nose
- Body aches
- Headache
- Chills
- Fatigue
- In addition, vomiting (25) and diarrhea (25)
have been reported. (Higher rate than for
seasonal flu.) - NOT the nausea/vomiting/diarrhea that people call
stomach flu.
14How soon does one become sick?
- Answer Very quickly due to short incubation!
- 1-4 days after you catch the virus, you feel sick
- Infected people shed virus make others sick
- Shedding can begin 1 day BEFORE you feel sick
- Peak shedding first 3 days of illness
- Subsides by 5-7 days
- Can be 10 days in children
15Who is at risk for severe infection?
- Children younger than 5 years old especially
children younger than 2 years old. - Pregnant women
- Adults 65 years of age and older.
- Persons with the following conditions
- Chronic pulmonary, including asthma
cardiovascular, renal, hepatic, hematological,
neurologic, neuromuscular, or metabolic disorders
such as diabetes - Person experiencing immunosuppression, including
that caused by medications or by HIV - Persons younger than 19 years of age who are
receiving long-term aspirin therapy - Residents of nursing homes and other chronic-care
facilities.
16Whats Going to Happen this Fall?
During the 1957-58 Asian Flu outbreak,
respiratory illnesses spiked just after school
started
17United States Situation
18H1N1 Targets the Young
19H1N1 Targets the Young
20Hand Hygiene - Cough Etiquette
- Frequently emphasize the basics
- Primary spread is by droplets from coughs and
sneezes emphasize covering mouth with tissue
and immediately dispose or cough into sleeve - Also spread from surfaces (2-8 hrs.)
- emphasize and encourage frequent hand washing
- no sharing of items
- Hands away from eyes, nose mouth
- Routine and normal cleaning and cleaners is
sufficient
21Sick Staff and Students
- Require sick staff students to stay home
- Watch for sick staff students upon arrival and
during the day - Isolate in a separate well-ventilated room
distance if needed - If tolerated, mask the patient
- Limit attending staff and provide protective
equipment (mask) for them - Send them home with information
22Emergency warning signs in children
- If a child gets sick and experiences any of
these warning signs, seek emergency medical care. -
- Fast breathing or trouble breathing
- Bluish or gray skin color
- Not drinking enough fluids
- Severe or persistent vomiting
- Not waking up or not interacting
- Irritable, the child does not want to be held
- Flu-like symptoms improve but then return
- with fever and worse cough
23Household cleaning, laundry, and waste disposal
- Throw away tissues and other disposable items
used by sick person in the trash (wash hands) - Keep surfaces clean by wiping down with a
household disinfectant according to label - Eating utensils and dishes of sick person
- Do not need to be cleaned separately wash
thoroughly in dishwasher or with soap and water - Linens and towels
- Household laundry soap and tumble dry on hot
- Avoid hugging laundry prior to washing to
prevent contaminating yourself - Clean hands with soap and water or alcohol-based
hand rub right after handling dirty laundry
24Exclusion Period
- CDC recommends those with flu-like illness be
excluded from school until at least 24 hrs. after
fever (100 F) is gone (without using
fever-reducing meds) - H1N1 fever generally lasts 2-4 days (exclusion
usually 3-5 days) may be longer - Emphasize stay home unless for medical care
- Avoid contact with others
- Advise good hand and respiratory infection
control etiquette - Those on antivirals may shed resistant viruses
25Antiviral Recommendations
- Novel A (H1N1) virus is susceptible to both
neuraminidase inhibitor antiviral medications
zanamivir (Relenza) and oseltamivir (Tamiflu). - It is resistant to the adamantane antiviral
medications, amantadine and rimantadine. - Antiviral treatment recommended for all
- confirmed, probable or suspected A(H1N1) cases
who are hospitalized or - are at higher risk for influenza complications.
- 84 M courses in federal state stockpiles with
100 M expected this fall.
26Initial Vaccination Priority Groups
- All people 6 months through 24 years of age
- People who live with or care for children younger
than 6 months of age - Pregnant women
- Healthcare and emergency services personnel
- People aged 25 through 64 years who have health
conditions associated with higher risk of medical
complications from influenza
27Vaccine Supply-Driven Priorities
- Pregnant women
- People who live with or care for children younger
than 6 months of age - Healthcare and emergency services personnel with
direct patient contact - Children 6 months through 4 years of age
- Children aged 5 through 18 years who have health
conditions associated with higher risk of medical
complications from influenza
28Vaccine Production Delivery
- Novel H1N1 Vaccine production by 5 companies
- 4 inactivated virus vaccine and 1 live,
attenuated - Currently in clinical trials
- Two shots may be recommended 2-4 wks apart
- Delivery to PH directly to up to 90,000
providers - Estimated delivery beginning mid-September
- Approximately 45 million doses by mid-October
- Additional shipments at 20 million doses/week
29Est. Vaccine Delivery Schedule
Mid October Per week thru November? Total Doses
by end of November?
Based upon Tulsa County proportion of US
population
30Tulsa County Target Groups Est.
- 4,500
- 12,509
- 16,875
- 203,830
- 69,883
- 307,100
Pregnant women HH Care Contacts Children lt 6
mos. Healthcare Emergency Services Children
adults 6 mos. 24 years Non- elderly with high
risk conditions Target Group Totals
31If Virulence Increases
- Consider allowing high risk student to stay home
- Increase exclusion period to 7-day minimum
- Plan for alternative means of educating
- Develop critical staffing contingency plans
- Active parental and staff screening, e.g., fever
- Exclude siblings of ill family members 5 days
- Distance and reduce mixing (rotate teachers)
- School dismissals
- Cancellation of school-related gatherings
32Panel Discussion
- Mass Vaccination Plan
- School-based vaccinations
- Points of Dispensing
- Push Partners
- Surveillance
- Guidance Review
- Lessons Learned Spring 2009
- School Dismissal
33Available Resources and Guidance
- Websites
- CDC
- State Department of Health
- Tulsa Health Department
- Dont Bug Me Materials
- Direct Email Communications
- Surveillance postings
34QUESTIONS?