EU Health Security Committee agrees statement on target and priority groups for vaccination

Published: 26 August 2009 y., Wednesday

Skiepijimas
The European Union Health Security Committee and the Early Warning and Response authorities (HSC/EWRS) adopted a policy statement proposed by the European Commission which outlines a shared European approach towards identifying target and priority groups for A H1N1 vaccination.

On the basis of current scientific evidence and taking into account guidance by the European Centre for Disease Control and the World Health Organisation, the HSC/EWRS statement recommends the following groups as constituting the first priority groups for A H1N1 vaccination:

All persons from 6 months old with underlying chronic conditions (e.g. Chronic respiratory diseases; chronic cardiovascular diseases and persons with congenital or acquired immunodeficiency) starting with those with most severe symptoms

Pregnant women

Health care workers

Once these first priority groups have been vaccinated, the vaccination proceeds until the national targets have been met.

The statement stresses that it is the responsibility and mandate of each Member State to develop a vaccination strategy for Influenza A H1N1. Each country identifies national target groups which are defined as all those population groups where A H1N1 vaccination is recommended. In some cases, this may be the entire population and in other cases only specific groups. However, it is unlikely that the vaccine will be immediately available for all target groups at the same time and therefore, it is necessary to define priority groups.

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Polish Super Ecstasy "UFO" Suspected in at Least 23 Deaths

A powerful version of ecstasy produced in Poland is thought to have been behind the deaths of three people here and at least 20 elsewhere in Europe, police said Wednesday. more »

Bill Gates talks up global health initiatives

Bill Gates gave almost $1.5 billion last year to fight global health threats, including AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis. more »

Second thoughts on sterilization

Many anguished Brazilian women want to reverse procedure more »

Doctors keep work offline

Although US physicians are enthusiastic users of the Web, most are reluctant to practice medicine online. more »

U.K. lays out cell phone safety plans

Government leaflet urges kids to reduce exposure more »

Shuttle pulls away from station

‘Job well done,’ Alpha’s commander tells Endeavour’s crew more »

Salt Sensitivity Increases Heart Disease Death Risk

Researchers Press to Understand Mysterious Phenomenon more »

Study Eyes Brain Use When Listening

Score one for exasperated women: New research suggests men really do listen with just half their brains. more »

EU Commissioner Praises Safety of Disputed Czech Nuclear Plant

The nuclear power plant in Temelin, southern Bohemia, which has been strongly criticized by neighboring Austria and activists from some other countries as "atomic scrap" is much safer than believed originally. more »

Europe’s Beef Scare

The continent is swept by a case of mad-cow dread more »