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UPDATE: Saturday, June 12, 2010      The Japan Times Weekly    2009年10月24日号 (バックナンバー)
 
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Medical staff given first H1N1 vaccinations

Swine flu vaccinations began Oct. 19 with doctors and other medical professionals given priority because supplies are limited.

A medical worker is inoculated for swine flu Oct. 19 at a hospital in Habikino, Osaka Prefecture. KYODO PHOTO

About 1 million medical workers are to be given the domestically produced vaccine first, according to the health ministry's priority ranking.

Next will be pregnant women and people with specific chronic diseases, beginning in November, in line with the government's plan to combat the fast-spreading H1N1 flu virus.

Children between the ages of 1 and 8 will be vaccinated starting in December, and parents of infants early next year.

But the schedule could be accelerated, as medical experts agree that a single shot of the vaccine, instead of two as previously thought necessary, is considered enough for people aged 13 and older.

Among medical workers who were administered the vaccine Oct. 19, Kazuko Naganuma, a 61-year-old nurse who got a 0.5-milliliter dose, welcomed the prioritizing. "It is good because we come into contact with patients," she said.

Naganuma was one of 15 staff members to be inoculated at a medical and pediatric clinic in Kofu, Yamanashi Prefecture, which received five 1-milliliter bottles of the vaccine Oct. 16.

"There are worries about giving a shot to people with underlying conditions, but I think any critical moment can be overcome," Toshio Inoue, 70, the clinic's director, said, referring to possible side effects.

In vaccinating the professionals who treat patients of the highly contagious disease, the ministry plans to survey about 20,000 of them for any side effects.

The Japan Times Weekly: Oct. 24, 2009
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