In this article about flu vaccine uptake in
America, a CDC spokesman says: We must increase demand to increase the
supply, said Dennis J. O'Mara, CDC associate director for adult immunization.
Companies are not going to produce vaccine they can't sell.
What is wrong with this picture? Why can't the
free market system be allowed to work with vaccines just like it works with any
other product bought and sold in America? The people know what they want. The
vaccine industry ought to produce exactly what the people are demanding and the
government should stay out of the business of drumming up business for industry.
Public health questions persist, ranging from
the number of vaccine manufacturers to how well matched the vaccine will be to
the upcoming season's active strains. By Victoria Stagg Elliott, AMNews staff.
June 16, 2003.
There's good news on the horizon regarding the
upcoming flu season -- and some work to be done, too. Despite the loss of one of
the three manufacturers of flu vaccine and a reduction in the number of doses
believed to be available this fall, public health officials and other vaccine
experts doubt that this year's supply will be marred by the delays and shortages
that characterized recent flu seasons.
Wyeth announced its exit from the injectable flu
vaccine market in November 2002. But the remaining two manufacturers, Aventis
Pasteur and Powderject Vaccines Inc., vowed to increase production to meet
demand.
Public health officials estimate that 80 million
to 85 million doses will be available for the coming season. They do not expect
shortages or delays because last year the three companies manufactured more than
95 million doses. Only about 80 million doses made it to patients. We are far,
far from our Healthy People 2010 goals of vaccinating 90% of the elderly and 60%
of younger people with risk factors, said Walt Orenstein, MD, MPH, director of
the CDC's National Immunization Project. 80 million to 85 million doses of flu
vaccine will be available this season, down from 95 million last year.
This situation represents both the success and
the failure of the National Influenza Vaccine Summit sponsored by the American
Medical Association and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The
annual event, held last month in Chicago, has gathered an increasing number of
stakeholders, including flu vaccine manufacturers, doctors, medical societies,
distributors and mass vaccinators.
Meeting organizers say it has successfully
increased communication between key players, thereby increasing vaccine supply
and improving stability. It has not, however, resulted in increased demand among
the general public, where interest has remained stubbornly flat. We must
increase demand to increase the supply, said Dennis J. O'Mara, CDC associate
director for adult immunization. Companies are not going to produce vaccine
they can't sell.
Flu vaccine experts do hope that several new
developments will improve the number of consumers who want it and the number of
physicians willing to provide it. Medicare reimbursement rates for
administration of the vaccine have nearly doubled.
An intranasal vaccine may come on the market
this season and may be more accessible than the shot. Although the FDA has not
approved the product, most connected to the situation believe that is imminent.
It is expected to be approved for healthy
individuals between 4 and 49. As such, it likely will not help the elderly or
those with medical conditions that may turn flu into a killer, but could improve
vaccination rates among health care workers and others who care for high-risk
people.
Medicare reimbursement for flu shots has nearly
doubled since last year. Inhaled influenza vaccine will be a tremendous advance
once it's licensed, said Eddy Bresnitz, MD, assistant commissioner for the New
Jersey Dept. of Health.
The CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practice has also expanded the number of people who can be targeted with early
vaccination campaigns, but is sticking to the two-tiered system that attempts to
ration vaccine for those who most need it during times of shortage and delay.
The two-tiered system remains controversial,
particularly in years without shortages. Some vaccine providers, particularly
those targeting workplaces and other nonmedical settings, are warning that the
two-tiered system undermines the overall mission.
Specifically, they say waiting to hold these
kinds of clinics during seasons when there is no supply crisis does not allow
enough time for widescale vaccinations. And offering early workplace clinics
that target only high-risk individuals is not practical because of privacy
considerations.
Last year, we were trapped with vaccine that we
couldn't give, said Roslyn Stone, chief operating officer of Corporate Wellness
Inc., a national occupational health care provider. We have no success giving
vaccines in December and January. We need to roll back the start date if we have
plenty of vaccine.
Possible bumps in the road
Although most experts expect the coming
vaccination season to be smooth, there are some long-term concerns, mostly
because of the limited number of manufacturers involved. If something goes
wrong, we could be in a lot of trouble, said J.R. Ransom, senior analyst for
immunizations at the National Assn. of County and City Health Officials. There
are also some indications that, despite a stable vaccine supply, the flu season
may be bumpy. The strains selected in March for this year's vaccine were, for
the first time in a long time, the same as the previous year.
A month later, public health officials noted a
new strain circulating and raised the possibility that the vaccine may not be
as good a match as in previous years. Even in the best years, the vaccine never
provides 100% protection. And, while the new strain may never prove to be a
serious threat
-- it might.
That shouldn't stop us in any way from
proceeding to immunize, said Herb Young, MD, director of the scientific
activities division at the American Academy of Family Physicians. The
complication this year is the possibility that we could see disease caused by a
strain that was not included in what was selected. That's always a possibility.
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"