Jenny Hope    Swine flu vaccine  The Media Winter 2010 flu vaccine drive

[Classic headline by Jenny Hope, the vaccine seller on the Daily Mail. Swine flu: The 'perfect storm', with the usual suspect: John Oxford and his bollocks: 'because two-thirds of the population did not get swine flu during the last two outbreaks, they risk falling victim now....huge numbers of people travelling to see family and friends over Christmas and New Year were carrying flu infections to different areas.'   You won't ever hear that Vitamin C saved the life of a man in NZ, who was dying from 'swine flu': [2010 Aug Video] Swine Flu Cure using Vitamin C Therapy]

By Jenny Hope and Sophie Borland
Last updated at 9:24 AM on 29th December 2010

As GP practices open for the first time after the extended bank holiday weekend, demand for swine flu vaccine is expected to soar

As GP practices open for the first time after the extended bank holiday weekend, demand for swine flu vaccine is expected to soar

A ‘perfect storm’ of winter illness will batter Britain’s health services today.

Hospitals will be pushed to breaking point by a post-Christmas deluge of patients suffering from flu and the winter vomiting bug.

Accident and emergency departments are bracing themselves for a surge of referrals as GP practices open for the first time after the extended bank holiday weekend.

They are also expecting high numbers of elderly patients to be brought in as they are visited by care workers for the first time in four days.

Soaring levels of both seasonal and swine flu will heap extra strain on hospitals already dealing with cases of the sickness bug norovirus, which usually peak at this time of year.

It is feared many potentially seriously ill patients will have waited until after the four-day weekend to see their doctor, pushing services to the limit.

The swine flu outbreak sparked a furious war of words last night as Health Minister Simon Burns accused Labour of exploiting the virus for political ends.

He rejected claims by Shadow Health Secretary John Healey that the Government had ‘cancelled’ a flu jab plan for under-fives to save money.

Mr Burns insisted that ministers ruled out a blanket vaccination programme for youngsters on medical grounds.

But as the virus continued to sweep the country yesterday, an expert warned that Britain is on the ‘cusp’ of an epidemic.

Virologist professor John Oxford, from the University of London, said that because two-thirds of the population did not get swine flu during the last two outbreaks, they risk falling victim now.

Dr Jim Wardrope, former president of the College of Emergency Medicine, who works at the Northern General Hospital in Sheffield, warned today would be one of the busiest of the year for hospitals.

‘There is usually a peak after bank holiday weekends and this one has lasted four days,’ he said. ‘There is definitely extra pressure at the moment.

‘We have a perfect storm of flu and norovirus and the last few days have been extremely busy. It’s the same for departments across the country.’

He explained that hospitals normally experience a peak in referrals from GPs following a bank holiday weekend as many patients are reluctant to use out-of-hours services and would rather wait for a routine appointment.

The influx comes as the head of the Royal College of GPs urged vulnerable patients to get the vaccine amid fears that Britain is on the brink of an epidemic.

Dr Clare Gerada said stocks of the jab arrived in most surgeries on Christmas Eve so there were currently enough supplies, and manufacturers were able to fill more orders.

Professor John Oxford said that huge numbers of people travelling to see family and friends over Christmas and New Year were carrying flu infections to different areas.

He added that it was possible children going back to school would also trigger a surge in flu cases.

This year’s seasonal flu vaccine contains protection against H1N1 and two other strains of flu virus, but uptake has been lower than expected in ‘at risk’ groups.

Around 45 per cent of those with underlying medical conditions have had the jab.

But only one in four pregnant women have done so – despite being four times more likely to develop potentially deadly breathing problems caused by swine flu.

 
 

Children under five are currently excluded from having a routine jab as part of the NHS programme, although many were vaccinated as a one-off measure during the swine flu pandemic and will retain some immunity as a result.

Independent medical advisers to the Government yesterday denied they had ever recommended routine seasonal jabs for young healthy children.

However, there have been reports that parents trying to get private jabs for their children have been turned away by High Street pharmacies and told to contact their GPs. Dr Gerada said GPs were prioritising patients so the most vulnerable were vaccinated first.

Children who were eligible because of underlying health conditions were among those, she added.

‘We want patients who need vaccinating because they’re at risk to come and see us, or contact the surgery for an appointment,’ she said.

‘Pregnant women, the elderly and those with a range of health conditions can get a jab.’

Figures released last Friday show the number of patients in critical care – most of whom have swine flu – had more than doubled in a week, from 182 to 460. 

In total, 27 have died of confirmed flu since October, with 24 of those dying of swine flu. Only one of those patients whose vaccine status was known had received a seasonal jab.

The revelation came as the parents of teenager Natalie Hill, who died of swine flu just before Christmas, described the joy she brought them.

The 17-year-old passed away just 42 hours after doctors at Hull Royal Infirmary discovered she had the H1N1 virus.

Victim: Natalie Hill, 17, is thought to have caught the virus at Hull Royal Infirmary

Victim: Natalie Hill, 17, is thought to have caught the virus at Hull Royal Infirmary

Mother Carol Hill, 50, from Hull, said: ‘She was a blessing in so many ways and made our family stronger. We just tried to give her everything a child would ever want. She has brought us all great joy.’ Miss Hill had battled necrotising enterocolitis – a condition which destroys part of the intestines – since birth, and had spent five months in a high-dependency unit because of complications.

A spokesman for the British Medical Association said the NHS had been very busy over the long bank holiday break.

She added: ‘There will be some extra demand on the first day back to work, but patients who need medical help over the holiday have been getting it from out-of-hours services, walk-in clinics and Accident and Emergency.

‘We don’t anticipate anything that exceptional for the time of year.’

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said: ‘The NHS was well prepared in advance, and it is coping well with the effects of the severe weather and flu. GP practices have been inviting people for whom the flu vaccination is recommended to have the vaccine, and I would urge them to do so.’

A spokesman for the Department of Health said there was no problem with vaccine supplies because GPs could order more if demand increased.

Professor Steve Field, former chairman of the Royal College of GPs, warned that no one should be complacent about flu.

He told BBC News: ‘People don’t feel that this is a serious illness.

‘We know it can be, particularly for those people with heart disease, chest disease and pregnant women.

‘They should come forward and have a vaccination.’

Labour 'playing politics' in vaccine row

Labour were last night accused of ‘stooping to a new low of political opportunism’ by using the swine flu outbreak to attack the Conservatives.

Health minister Simon Burns has rejected claims by Shadow Health Secretary John Healey that the Government ‘cancelled’ a flu jab plan for under-fives as a cost-cutting exercise designed to save £85 million.

Mr Burns insisted ministers had ruled out the blanket vaccination programme based on expert medical advice.

Last year, all healthy children aged six months to five years were offered the jab. This year, doctors asked for £25 per patient to cover the costs of the jabs for the 38 million youngsters.

The Joint Committee on Vaccinations and Immunisations said in January it would be ‘prudent’ to offer the jab to all under-fives, but by July that advice had changed. The jab would be offered only to those youngsters deemed clinically ‘at risk’.

Mr Healey accused ministers of making the ‘wrong judgment’ by cancelling the jabs. Mr Burns yesterday hit back, saying: ‘Labour have stooped to a new low of political opportunism.

‘The Government is legally obliged to implement recommendations made by experts on the joint committee.

‘John Healey is either spectacularly ill-informed or playing politics with people’s health.’

Mr Healey told the Mail on Tuesday: ‘The problem lies with the groups most at risk, like children. That has come because the Government axed the annual advertising campaign and cancelled the flu jab plan for the under-fives.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1342347/Swine-flu-The-perfect-storm-flu-victims-soar-winter-vomiting-bug-spreads-elderly-fall-ill.html#ixzz19X52UimR