Title: H1N1%20Update
1H1N1 Update
- Tina Kitchin
- Department of Human Services, SPD
- 9/24/09
2Goals
- Understand the flu
- Current status of the pandemic
- Understand the steps you can take to protect
yourself and your clients - Know where to turn with questions
3Influenza
- Symptoms
- Respiratory Illness, fever, headache, myalgia,
cough - Transmission
- Droplet (36 feet)
- Incubation
- 13 days
4Impact of Influenza Typical Year
- 1020 ill
- U.S.
- 225,000 hospitalizations
- 36,000 deaths
- Oregon
- 2,750 hospitalizations
- 450 deaths
5Influenza Virus Changes
- Antigenic drift
- Minor changes to strains each year, need new
vaccine - Antigenic shift
- Major reassortment, nobody has immunity
Widespread pandemic
6Generation of New Influenza A Virus Subtypes with
Pandemic Potential
Gerberding, J. L. et al. N Engl J Med
20043501236-1247
7 Why worry about pandemic H1N1?
8Pandemic H1N1 worldwide
- Pandemic H1N1 is widespread
- confirmed in more than 170 countries
- Cases 296,471 Deaths at least 3,486
- WHO / CDC have stopped tracking individual
cases - Focus on impact (deaths)
- Circulating virus types
9Oregon status
- Oregon no longer counting every case
- Disease widespread
- Hospitalizations 139
- (about 11 counties)
- Deaths 13 (about 11 counties)
- Cases occur sporadically and in clusters
- PHD data as of 9/18
10 What makes Pandemic H1N1 different?
11Hospitalizations over the summer, Oregon, 2009
as of 11 Sep 2009
12Different age distribution of Hospitalizations
as of 31 Jul 2009
13Pandemic H1N1 deaths in younger people, US
Deaths
5-24
Age Group
14Pandemic H1N1 Influenza strain Predominates
A (H1)
A (H3)
A (Unk)
B
Novel H1N1
Oct
Dec
Jan
Nov
Mar
Apr
Feb
May
Jun
Jul
through 08/01/2009
15 of flu-like illnesses as of 9/12
16Influenza
- Symptoms
- Respiratory Illness, fever, headache, myalgia,
cough - Transmission
- Droplet (36 feet)
- Incubation
- 13 days
17Only You Can Stop the Flu
- Stay home if you are sick
- Try to stay 3 ft away from sick people
- Wash your hands or use alcohol-based hand
sanitizer - Disinfect contaminated and high-touch surfaces
(door knobs, microwaves, remotes, phones, etc.)
18(No Transcript)
19Vaccination
- Seasonal Vaccine
- Protects against 3 other strains for flu.
- Recommended for everyone!
- Distributed in same way as every year
- H1N1 Vaccine
- Protects only against the new H1N1 strain
- Targeted for priority groups
- Distributed only through Public Health
20Vaccination target populations
21H1N1 Vaccination Priority Groups
- High Risk people, age 25 64
- chronic pulmonary (including asthma),
cardiovascular (except hypertension), renal,
hepatic, cognitive, neurologic/ neuromuscular,
hematologic, or metabolic disorders (including
diabetes mellitus) or immunosuppression
(including immunosuppression caused by
medications or by human immunodeficiency virus)
22H1N1 Vaccination Priority Groups
- Health Care Worker
- nursing homes, skilled nursing facilities,
physicians offices, urgent care centers, and
outpatient clinics, and to persons who provide
home health care - Clarification from PH
- This includes ALFs/RCFs, CCRCs, AFHs, and HCWs.
It does not include any day programs, senior
centers, etc.
23Is the vaccine safe??????
- This is the same vaccine that is made every year
for flu, made in the same way. Every year it
include 3 different, new strains. This vaccine
will just include a 4th strain. There just wasnt
time to get it into the seasonal vaccine. - There have been no significant side effects in
the current trials.
24Office Implications
- Asked to plan for 40 absenteeism
- In your office
- In facilities/homes, Home Care Workers, etc.
- Possibly some interruption in supply chains,
needed services, etc. - Take Seriously the need for Business Continuity
Plans - Consider cross training now
25Protect yourself and others
- Make it easy for folks to wash their hands or use
hand sanitizer purchase the sanitizer for
common areas and staff who go into facilities and
home - Encourage people who are sick to stay home
- Get immunized for the flu as soon as it is
available for you
26Keep In Touch
- http//www.flu.oregon.gov/
- http//www.oregon.gov/DAS/HR/flu.shtml
- http//www.dhs.state.or.us/admin/hr/h1n1/
- Look for the development of a SPD website for
information that has been sent out, FAQs,
policies, etc. - SS-IM-09-048 on SNAP and H1N1
27What we need from you
- A heads-up if and when there are significant
impacts in your office, with your providers, etc. - Policy/Rules that you think may need to be
relaxed if this has a significant impact - Your ideas about how to get providers vaccinated
- A heads-up of rumors that you are hearing
28Dont Get Crazy
29- Key points
- Pandemic H1N1 flu is here few people have
immunity - We will likely see more illness, more
hospitalizations - Vaccine is our best weapon
- Challenge vaccinate 2,000,000 Oregonians
- Community Mitigation
- Stay home when sick, cover cough, wash hands
- Schools, business, health care systems need plan
for business continuity
30- Tina Kitchin, MD, FAAP
- Tina.c.kitchin_at_state.or.us