Moves to quash vaccine rumours
2009-11-19 14:32
Special Report
At least 60 million people in the United States have been vaccinated against swine flu, and children are twice as likely as adults to have been innoculated, a top health official said.
Once a total of 100 cases of swine flu have been confirmed in South Africa, authorities will stop the individual laboratory confirmation of cases, the Department of Health says.
Find out all you need to know about H1N1 or Swine Flu from the team at Health24.
Beijing - Beijing authorities have moved to quash rumours fuelled by bogus text messages that the city would suspend H1N1 flu vaccinations amid safety concerns after two people died following inoculations.
Some cellphone subscribers in the city, which in September launched what officials have called the world's first mass A(H1N1) vaccination programme, had received such text messages in recent days, state media have reported.
The message purported to have been originated by city authorities.
But in a statement posted late on Wednesday on its website, the Beijing Municipal Health Bureau said: "This text message is completely untrue."
Public concern over the safety of Chinese A(H1N1) vaccines had been growing after some recipients reportedly experienced adverse reactions.
The national health ministry on Friday said two people had died in China after being inoculated. The ministry did not say where the deaths occurred.
State-run Xinhua news agency on Thursday quoted a Beijing health bureau spokesman saying "the inoculations will not be suspended".
"Beijing has reported no serious cases of adverse reaction," spokesperson Zhang Jianshu said.
A survey published by state media in October revealed over half of all Chinese did not plan to be vaccinated due to worries about the safety of the shots.
China authorities in recent years have recalled or banned several pharmaceutical or herbal drug products after patients were sickened or even killed by them.
- AFP