Thursday, May 20, 2010

Polls traced declining interest in H1N1 vaccine

If the trajectory of public opinion during the H1N1 influenza pandemic is any guide, safety worries and doubts about the severity of the disease threat may cause a good share of the public to shun vaccination the next time a pandemic emerges, according to a review of 10 months' worth of polls.

Surveys taken before the H1N1 vaccine became available showed that about half of the population planned to be vaccinated, but that fraction shrank considerably by the time the vaccine became readily available in December, says the report published online today by the New England Journal of Medicine. The main reasons for not wanting the vaccine were safety worries and a belief that it wasn't needed.

On the other hand, the polls suggested that most people heeded public health messages about other flu-prevention steps, such as hand washing, says the report by researchers from Harvard University and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Also, pollsters found that a majority had a generally favorable impression of the governmental response to the pandemic.

The authors reviewed 20 polls conducted between April 2009 and January 2010, eight of them run by the Harvard School of Public Health for the CDC and the rest by news organizations and polling institutes.

Early in the pandemic, surveys indicated that most Americans were following the public health advice to wash their hands more often and to prepare to stay home if they got sick. About 35% of respondents said they had avoided being near people with flu-like symptoms.

Before the vaccine became available, 46% to 57% of respondents said they planned to be vaccinated, and 59% to 70% of parents intended to have their children immunized.

For adults who said they would not or might not seek vaccination, the top three reasons cited in September were concern about side effects (30%), doubt about the risk of getting a serious case of flu (28%), and a belief that they could get drug treatment if they did get sick (26%). Safety concerns and doubts about the disease risk continued to be major deterrents to vaccination in December and January, the polls showed.

The surveys also documented that few people who wanted the vaccine succeeded in getting it in October and November, when the doses began trickling out to providers. By early November, 17% of adults had tried to get vaccinated, but only 30% of them succeeded. Among adults in high-priority groups, 21% sought the vaccine, but 66% of them failed, the polls found. About 40% of parents sought the vaccine for their children, but two thirds of them failed.

By the time states began offering the vaccine to everyone in mid-December, interest in it was ebbing, the polls showed. The proportion of people concerned about getting sick dropped to 40% at that point, from a peak of 51% to 59% in October and November.

The share of parents who had at least one child vaccinated reached 35% in December and 40% in January, figures well above those for adults seeking the vaccine for themselves. Among adults who had talked with a health care practitioner about the vaccine, 53% said the practitioner had recommended it and 17% said the opposite.

Through the whole period studied, a majority of Americans had a good impression of the government's response, the polls showed. In the early days, 54% thought the response was appropriate, while 39% saw it as an overreaction. By January, 59% endorsed the response, while 39% called it fair or poor.

The report says the public's two main concerns about the response were displeasure with the vaccine shortage and, in the early phase of vaccine distribution, worry that the government hadn't done enough to ensure the vaccine was safe.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

The Separated twin girls to be discharged next week

Conjoined twins Sita and Gita are ready to go home, a month after being separated in a 14-hour long surgery. According to doctors, the twins have recuperated completely and will be discharged next week.

They were born fused, had common intestinal and urinary tracts. Parts of their pelvises, spines, hipbones and legs were also fused. Finally, the twins have recovered from the surgery and are ready to go home, separated.
Doctors of Batra hospital have tied up with a private hospital in Patna, where the twins will get free medical treatment. The daughters of a daily wager, Subhash Mukhiya, and Nirmala Devi, Sita and Gita hail from Bhawanipur Kushwaha village in Bihar’s East Champaran district.

The 14-hour long surgery involved separating their spines and pelvises as also the intestines followed by splitting of the common anal canal (faecal tract). The anal openings, the vaginal openings and the urinary tracts were then reconstructed and skin defects closed using constructed skin flaps. A team of 27 specialists including paediatric surgeons, critical care specialists, orthopaedics and plastic surgeons were involved in conducting the surgery.

Surgeries to separate conjoined twins have been few and far between. Very few cases have been successfully operated upon worldwide and in India the number of such surgeries performed is almost negligible.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Air Pollution can kill your Heart !

A new study is trying to make an effort to study the impact of air you breathe on your heart.


The doctors have drawn substantial links between heart attacks, strokes and other cardiovascular diseases, to what we breathe besides our eating habits.


Places experiencing heavy traffic are now considered a much stronger cause of health problems, and what your lungs can handle, your heart may not.


The doctors feel that the lungs are able to handle more pressure than the heart. So polluted air causes mire threat to your heart than to your lungs.


Breathe fresh air to avoid any possibility of an heart attack.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

We must invest in Mother's Health

I wish all my readers a Very Happy Mother's Day. It is our duty to respect and love our mother, who has given this wonderful opportunity to us to enjoy the moments of life.

A report by the NGO ranks India as the highest in the world in terms of shortfall of health workers. The report calls for investment in female health-care workers to address the shortfall needed to save the lives of mothers, newborn babies and kids.

More care should be taken regarding the health status of women and mothers.