ATLANTA -- A government advisory panel decided Wednesday to
encourage flu shots for children ages 6 months to 23 months -- a group not previously
on the recommended list for the vaccine.
The government currently recommends the vaccine only for the elderly, the
chronically ill and pregnant women, although it is available to others who want
it.
But the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's immunization panel said
new research shows 6- to 23-month-olds are at increased risk for flu-related
hospitalizations.
Before making a full-fledged recommendation to doctors that the children get
annual vaccines, the panel wants to study the possible impact on providers and
parents, said the CDC's Dr. Keiji Fukuda.
Beginning next flu season, the advisory panel will also encourage people at
lower risk for flu to wait until November to get shots. October shots should be
reserved for people at high risk, the panel said.
The panel said it expects 88 million to 93 million doses of flu vaccine to be
available for the 2002-03 flu season, up from 87 million this year. The vaccine
has been delayed for the past two flu seasons because of manufacturing delays.
Flu kills up to 20,000 Americans each year.
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On the Net:
CDC flu site:
http://www.cdc.gov/nip/flu