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Flu shot shortage poses public health disaster

Federal and state governments should declare emergency

Americans Travel To Canada For Flu Shots
John Normile / Getty Images
Robert Schultz of Hamburg, N.Y., stands in line for a flu shot Oct. 20 at the Urgent Care Niagara Clinic in Fort Erie, Ontario, Canada, where he went after giving up on trying to get a flu shot in the United States.
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Growing outrage
Oct. 20: Many Americans are becoming increasingly frustrated over the distribution of scarce flu vaccine. NBC's Robert Bazell reports.

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COMMENTARY
By Arthur Caplan, Ph.D.
MSNBC contributor
updated 11:17 p.m. ET Nov. 2, 2004

Arthur Caplan, Ph.D.

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Someone approached me the other day whose life you hold in your hands. John Stuart Katz is at high risk of dying if he gets the flu. It is up to you not to kill him. And it is up to your government to do more than it has to date to make sure that you cannot insist on putting his life at risk.

When I spoke with him recently, Katz wanted to know if I had any “connections” to help him get a flu shot. Five years ago he underwent a kidney transplant using an organ donated by his wife. At 66, Katz takes medicine that helps his transplanted kidney keep working, but which also weakens his immune system. As a professor, he is constantly exposed to coughing and sneezing in classrooms. But his doctor has no flu vaccine and Katz is afraid he might die if he catches the flu. And he should be worried since he's in a very high-risk category.

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I told him I did not have any connections but I would see what I could do. What I did not tell him was that at least four doctors have asked me if I wanted to get a flu shot even though I am not in any of the high-risk categories. I told them no. And if you are not over the age of 65, under the age of 2, pregnant, living in a nursing home, someone who works with patients in hospitals or nursing homes, or someone with an immune disorder — the people at the greatest risk of dying from the flu — you should say no to a flu shot, too.

As we all know, there is not enough flu vaccine to go around. This is not the first such shortage to hit the United States — there was not enough flu vaccine last year — but this year is much worse. A huge portion of the supply disappeared when British regulators found that flu vaccine made at a plant operated by Chiron Corp. in Liverpool, England, had been contaminated with bacteria. How this mistake happened no one seems to know — or at least no one is saying. What is clear is that 48 million doses of flu vaccine that were due to come to the United States are not going to make it to our clinics, hospitals and doctors' offices for distribution.

An ethical challenge
This situation poses a direct ethical challenge to each and every one of us. Are you going to try and wangle your way to a flu shot even if you are not in one of the high-risk groups? Are you going to try and shove Katz out of line?

I hope the answer to that question is no. It is ethically inexcusable to put someone else’s life at risk by using a medical resource that you do not need. It is very clear what the right thing to do in this situation is, but will Americans do the right thing? Maybe not. Consider these examples:

  • At Louisiana State University any student who wants a flu shot is apparently getting one. Students receiving shots at the student health center are not being screened to be sure that they're in one of the high-risk categories.
  • In Pennsylvania and Colorado, jerks have broken into physicians’ offices and stolen flu shots.
  • Hospitals across the country are getting offers from greedy wholesalers eager to supply them with flu shots for $800 when a shot should cost about $10.
  • Some doctors are vaccinating their families, friends and long-time patients, even if they're not in high-risk categories. Meanwhile, dozens of nursing homes say their residents cannot get any shots.
  • Some chain stores where many people go to get their annual flu shots are giving them out no questions asked.
  • The Internet is full of quacks and creeps offering alternative "treatments" for the flu.

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