Emergency rooms at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center’s and other area hospitals have been inundated with patients suffering flu-like symptoms.
Children’s officials are now seeing about 700 patients a day, up from a typical busy day in the ER of 400 patients, said Kate Setter, a Children’s hospital spokeswoman.
Those numbers include the main campus in Cincinnati, the Liberty Twp. campus and the hospital’s urgent care facilities in Fairfield and Mason.
“All of our hospitals are busy, but Children’s is getting hit harder than our community hospitals,” said Tonda Francis, of the Greater Cincinnati Health Council.
Francis said health care providers assume the flu cases are all H1N1, a strain that President Barack Obama has declared a national emergency.
The declaration came on a weekend in which thousands nationwide stood in long lines for the H1N1 vaccine, including between 5,000 to 6,000 people in Butler County.
The national emergency declaration means that area hospitals can more easily set up alternate treatment and triage procedures to handle patient volumes if continue to surge.
But some fear it could cause panic and increase demand for the vaccine, which most area hospitals — with the exception of the Atrium Medical Center — had not received as of Monday, Oct. 26.
The Ohio Department of Health has ordered 595,200 doses of the vaccine for the virus, also known as swine flu.
The vaccine has been slow to arrive to the more than 5,000 hospitals and health care providers statewide due to the slower than expected H1N1 production, said ODH Spokesman Bret Atkins.
But Atkins said officials should begin receiving the vaccine sometime this week or the next few weeks.
“There are so many thousands of providers and a limited supply of the vaccine,’’ Atkins said. “There’s still more that is being manufactured and we expect this to be a multi-month process.’’
Atrium spokeswoman Wendy Parks said officials have about 700 doses of the vaccine and only inoculating health care providers.
She said she hopes Obama’s declaration doesn’t cause panic or a surge in patient volumes.
“It seems that the message is getting out in an understandable way so people don’t worry needlessly. Now, could that change? I don’t know.’’
Contact this reporter at (513) 820-2180 or tlatta@coxohio.com
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5:25 PM, 10/27/2009
Your child did receive the full age appropriate dose. Children under 10 yrs need a second age appropriate full dose of the H1N1 immunization in approx 28 days. The reason is because younger children's immune system needs an extra dose for some immunizations to work at full potential. Keep searching for locally offered clinics closer to the time your childs next dose is due.
1:48 PM, 10/27/2009
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10:04 AM, 10/27/2009