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Feds to ship 1.8M swine flu vaccine doses next week
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Sounds like a money grab situation for the drug manufacturers. Vaccines to the highest bidder.....
talking about
Feds to ship 1.8M swine flu vaccine doses next week
CTV.ca News Staff
Date: Wed. Nov. 4 2009 10:00 PM ET
The federal government will ship 1.8 million doses of the swine flu vaccine to the provinces and territories next week, CTV News has learned.
Government sources confirmed to CTV News that the figure includes a shipment of unadjuvanted vaccine doses that have been developed for pregnant women.
The figure is considerably lower than the three million doses the government had hoped to ship each week beginning next week.
The news comes a day after Canada's chief public health officer said the country's pandemic vaccine manufacturer has shipped bulk quantities of parts of the vaccine out of the country.
In remarks to a news conference Tuesday in Vancouver, Dr. David Butler-Jones said GlaxoSmithKline has shipped bulk quantities of the antigen, the main ingredient of the vaccine, to other nations that need it.
Butler-Jones explained that GSK has made more antigen than can be bottled and since enough has been produced for Canada's needs, the surplus went overseas.
Meanwhile, Canadians are being told that there is so little vaccine being sent to the provinces this week, some flu shot clinics have had to be closed.
Alberta had to cancel clinics over the weekend, and has been forced to limit access to the vaccine this week. Only children between six months and under five years of age are receiving the shots, though on Friday, the program will be expanded to include pregnant women.
Nova Scotia too has been forced to restrict access to the vaccine this week to just young children under five years of age and pregnant women. Adults with chronic illnesses are being told to wait.
The slowdown in getting vaccine out to the flu clinics appears to lie in the processes that come after vaccine antigen is produced at GSK's plant in Ste-Foy, Que.
After production, it is bottled into vials and then passed through a "fill line" for quality control and distribution. But it appears the antigen is being produced faster than the vials can be filled, so the excess is being exported.
A spokesperson for GlaxoSmithKline explained to a number of news outlets Tuesday that enough of the antigen had been produced to meet Canada's target of making available 50.4 million doses of vaccine. Because they had an excess, they are now exporting the excess for filling for international markets, including the World Health Organization.
The spokesperson did not indicate how much excess antigen was produced, nor did she say when or where it was shipped.
Butler-Jones assured Canadians that the bulk exports won't slow down the country's swine flu vaccination campaign and won't impact how long Canadians wait to be immunized.
"There has been bulk vaccine that we're not able to actually fill here so that has been exported," he said. "But all of the vaccine that we can fill in Canada has stayed and will stay in Canada until our immunization is complete."
But at flu shot clinics across the country, supplies remain low and lineups continue.
The shortage problem worsened this week when GSK shifted its focus to preparing and shipping vaccine without adjuvant for pregnant women.
GSK said Tuesday it has now finished producing that version of the vaccine and is again focusing efforts on the vaccine intended for the majority of Canadians.
Around seven million have been distributed so far to provinces and territories, and shipments dropped to 436,000 doses this week.
Butler-Jones brushed off criticism that the vaccination campaign has been bungled. He said the reality is that just a week into the campaign 10 to 20 per cent of the people in many communities have been vaccinated -- more than any other country in the world.
Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq also noted that the government could have waited until there were sufficient doses for all Canadians to implement the immunization program, but instead they decided to roll out the vaccine early to target those most at risk.
A big price tag
Newly released figures from Ottawa and the provinces say the H1N1 vaccine will cost about $400 million, not including related costs.
The federal government is picking up 60 per cent of the tab for the 50 million shots, with the provinces paying the rest.
Ottawa will pay out another $78 million in costs for Health Canada, the Public Health Agency of Canada, and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
That bill includes: developing emergency and strategic plans, surveillance and outbreak management, communications, and overtime, among other costs. The government's public awareness campaign will cost an additional $4.5 million.
Questions about single vaccine supplier
Meanwhile, critics blasted the Conservative government Tuesday for going to only one company for the H1N1 vaccine.
If Canada, like the U.S., used multiple vaccine suppliers, critics charged, the country might have avoided the bottlenecks that formed while trying to get the vaccine out to Canadians.
"Getting 50 million doses from one company is like trying to fill 50 million cups of water from the same tap," accused NDP health critic Judy Wasylycia-Leis.
Canada's H1N1 vaccine is made exclusively by GlaxoSmithKline, which signed a 10-year contract in 2001 with the then-Liberal government to develop and produce enough vaccine for the entire population in the event of a pandemic.
The contract was awarded to Shire BioChem, a company that gave $57,000 to the Liberal Party in 2001. The company has since been bought out by GSK, but the contract remained valid since it secured the Ste. Foy vaccine production facility.
Aglukkaq said the agreement has worked well.
"The domestic supplier I think has worked very well in our favour," she told the Vancouver news conference. "In Canada, we are doing better than any other country in producing vaccine on a per-capita basis with one company."
But Butler-Jones told the Toronto Star it's now being considered whether there's an "additional advantage" to having another supplier for pandemic flu vaccine, to help "hedge our bets."
"That's something that we will come back to, to think about after we deal with what we've got now," he said.
A spokesperson for Prime Minister Stephen Harper also told the newspaper the government is willing to rethink its pandemic plan."
"I think it's fair to say that right now once this has passed, that we will be reconsidering and re-examining all parts of the plan to see what worked, whether it was the coordination between the government and the provinces, whether it's the choice of a single supplier," Andrew MacDougall said.
"I think it would be wise once this has passed to look at what has happened and to have those discussions only with the benefit of hindsight."
With reports from The Canadian Press
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I applaud the budget, even though Health Care and education may stay unscathed. Sadly this cannot last and I worry to later this year where cuts will become enviable. If anything, this provides the Wildrose Alliance plenty of ammo when an election is called.




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CAB
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You know I sometimes think the supply is not the problem, but rather the decision at the provincial levels in terms of who could distribute the vaccine. In Ontario for example, the Provincial government determined it was the local health Units who determined and planned for the distribution, yet in some communities like Cornwall Ontario, there are rumors that Health Unit staff and their families were given the vaccine as a priority prior to the high risk clinics. Other communities seemed to have limited access and staff running the limited clinics as opposed to a problem with the amount of vaccine.
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david sawkiw[saskatchewan farmer]
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Don in the US?
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i wish i did not read this article.
M.A.R.
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Steve from Toronto
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As long as GSK met it's contractual obligations with Canada, it is free to do with the extra product as it see's fit. If there is a buyer overseas, then it gets shipped overseas.
The media is steering the public in the wrong direction yet again. The media is nor longer just reporting the new, THEY ARE MAKING THE NEWS! And the public falls for it everytime. Now the media can keep this story afloat for a couple of days until they can find something else pick at.
Like reporting the shortages. The goverment and the news outlet knew that GSK was going to spend last week making the pregnant woman's version of the vaccine last week. Based on the original schedule, there would have been no problems. But the media got involved and made the story.
I blame the media for the panic that hit Canada last week, forcing many clinics to open early and take on far more clients than expected. By causing the panic, the media created the week long stories about the long lines and then another week's worth of stories about shortages.
This is a flu. 25,000 Canadians die due to flu complications every year. H1N1 has kill not even 0.01% of that number. You have a greater chance of dying in an auto accident right after getting your H1N1 shot, then you do, dying of the flu itself.
But the media will never report that fact!
JTP
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SpinMeNot
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Pip
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mark
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Cary Tarasoff
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heather
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READ THE WHOLE ARTICLE PLEASE!!!!!
No wonder we've idiots in power... idiots voted for them! Sorry to be so rude but for crying out loud! Actually read the whole article, every single word in it, before you go spouting off!
Portes
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Craig from NS
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Johnny Kananaskis
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H. donker, Dundas, Ont.
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SN
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It's a privately owned company. The gov't is not shipping vaccines abroad you morons, Glaxo is. Complain to them.
Some of the comments on here frighten me when they show how ill-informed adults can be about simple concepts like private vs state ownership. Holy cow!
We need reading and IQ tests for people to be able to vote.
Nick in Gatineau
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Suzanne T (Lower Mainland)
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Sadly, it might be true!
Duane in Calgary
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The whole problem has been an utter lack of planning on the part of the federal and provincial governments. That is where the blame lies.
Vince M
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david sawkiw[saskatchewan farmer]
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Maybe this shortage was to make the 'nay' crowd say 'yay'.
Only time will tell, how this flu unfolds this winter season.
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Get the vaccine
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When our children were young, they gave needles in the upper part of the leg (a little more fat there).Also, in the U.S., they show the little children given a spray up the nose. Seems more humane. But I understand that they have a different flu shot than Canada. Sounds like Canada has bought a less effective supply.D id anyone see the PM and his family getting the shots? I heard it said that the Obamas weren't going to give it to their children. Mmmm?
julie
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how can they say that it will be save not knowing how might effect the body?
something is fishy cause government never explain about the vaccine and it showed up very last minute...how can they be sure it will be safe???
didn't government had to make second choice before they give vaccine???think about it.
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Thinking it's time to move to France....
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