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2010年12月8日 星期三

Doctors encouraged pregnant to get influenza vaccine

Approximately twice more pregnant as usual has flu year during pandemic influenza H1N1, most because their doctors urged them to do this, the Federal Government researchers reported on Thursday.

But still only about half of pregnant women during the flu season has immunized, even though they are much more likely to be seriously ill, die or lose their babies if they come down with the flu, I found the u.s. Centers for disease control and prevention.

Ironically, many of the women who don't have flu said they were afraid of their own health or the health of their babies, CDC found.

The American College of Obstetricians and gynaecologists and CDC's Advisory Committee on immunization practices much strongly recommend that pregnant women get influenza vaccination to protect themselves and their babies.

But historically, only 24 percent of those pregnant during flu season 2007-2008 has vaccinated and only 11 percent made next year.

During the pandemic flu, almost all United States was advised to achieve two vaccines-the seasonal flu shot and a separate H1N1 influenza.

Pregnant women were, as usual, named as a priority group – especially after early information suggested that pregnant women were especially susceptible to H1N1.

CDC researchers looked for searches of over 16000 pregnant in 10 States.

They found that, in these 10 States, only 50% of pregnant women received a seasonal influenza vaccine and 46 percent have a flu vaccine.

More than 60 percent of pregnant women whose doctors recommended the H1N1 vaccine got one, against just under 6% who said that they don't have offered one. More than 67 percent said that their physicians offered a seasonal vaccine and 75 percent were offered H1N1.

"With a new virus, 2009 H1N1, the role of health care providers in reassure pregnant women could have been critical because of concerns of patients with the new vaccine," the CDC wrote in its weekly report on death and disease.

"2290 Women who received the 2009 H1N1 vaccination, 50.9% reported receiving it in the Office of your Gynecologist/obstetrician and 25.7 percent received a health department or Community clinic," the report adds.

Women who did not obtain a H1N1 vaccine, more than 60 percent said they were concerned about their own safety or that of their unborn babies.

U.s. health Officials are struggling to understand why Americans in general get flu shots. The CDC estimates that nearly all the doses of seasonal flu vaccine has used 115 million last season, but doses of H1N1 flu 162 million distributed, only 80 million were used.

In March, researchers reported that pregnant women in Australia and New Zealand who had H1N1 flu pandemic were 13 times more likely to become critically ill and admitted to hospitals.

In October, a study confirmed that newborn babies whose mothers have a flu shot during pregnancy, were less likely to get the flu or be admitted to hospital with a respiratory disease in the first six months of life.


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