Czech Republic to start vaccinating against swine flu next week
With a sharp increase in swine flu cases in recent days, hospitals across the country are bracing for an epidemic. The first batch of 95,000 swine flu vaccines arrived earlier this week and on Thursday the Czech government announced who would be first in line for them.
This brings the amount of people who can receive a vaccination to almost a million, roughly a tenth of population of the Czech Republic, where 650 people have tested positive for the virus and three have died of the disease so far.
Anti-viral drugs for 2,5 million patients will also be distributed to doctors offices and hospitals around the country. Along with the vaccine, doctors will receive 20 packages each of Tamiflu, a drug used to treat seasonal influenza and said to be equally effective against the swine flu.
Meanwhile, with the spread of the virus across the country, schools have been closing down, three this week alone, and hospitals have been restricting visits in order to protect their patients. People have been encouraged to get a seasonal flu jab this year, but the country’s chief hygiene officer Michál Vít said on Thursday there was no reason to panic. The majority of swine flu cases in the Czech Republic have been light and health statistics from Prague and the regions suggest that the country has yet to reach the threshold of an epidemic.