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Health experts endorsed in Washington, D.C. the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's latest recommendation that all children between the ages of 6 months and 18 receive a flu shot, according to media reports Thursday.(File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Sept. 25 (Xinhuanet) -- Health experts endorsed in Washington, D.C. the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's latest recommendation that all children between the ages of 6 months and 18 receive a flu shot, according to media reports Thursday.
This means the number of children targeted for flu
vaccinations this season will increase by about 30 million.
The expanded flu-shot project is supported by
the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases and the American Academy of
Pediatrics.
By increasing the target groups, health
experts hoped, there will be a slash of the amount of time children
and parents stay home from school and work, and a slash of the need for
antibiotics to treat influenza.
School-age children have the highest rate of
influenza in the U.S., according to William Schaffner, president-elect of
the National Foundation of Infectious Diseases.
While influenza usually breaks out the most between
December and March, people should be better vaccinated this month, Schaffner
urged, suggesting a record of 146 million doses will be available.
"Flu is very transmissible in school,"
said Julie Gerberding, director of the Centers. "This is truly an effort
not only to improve the individual health of children but to affect the
population of children as they congregate in schools and day care."
Every year, between 5 and 20 percent of the U.S.
population (15 million to 60 million) get the flu; 200,000 are hospitalized and
about 35,000 die from influenza-related complications.
The Centters did not changed its recommendations
regarding other groups who should get a flu shot, including people 50 and older,
people with chronic illnesses, pregnant women and health care workers.
Overall, it indicated about 265.1 million
people, or 85 percent of the U.S. population, should get a flu shot.
In the words of Gerberding, everyone should
be vaccined except kids 6 months old and younger and "completely healthy
adults who have no contact with someone who isn't."
"The message for most people is get your flu shot,"
Gerberding said. "It's an advantage to you or someone you care about."
(agencies)