Community Corner

Mounting Deaths Prompt Run on Flu Shots

As the flu claims a third Orange County resident, local pharmacies are beginning to run out of flu shots, but there are still some Los Alamitos and Seal Beach pharmacies that have shots.

With Orange County’s flu-related death toll climbing to three this week, local pharmacies are beginning to run out of flue shots.

Several Orange County pharmacies are reporting shortages following a run on flu shots Friday. In Seal Beach there are still a handful of pharmacies that still have vaccines available.

According to the Healthmap Vaccine finder and calls to local pharmacies, there are still vaccines at the CVS on 921 Pacific Coast Highway. at the CVS at 12490 Seal Beach Boulevard, and at the Rite Aid at 11172 Los Alamitos Boulevard in Los Alamitos

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“Over the last week, there has been a run on flu shots,” said Cal-Med Pharmacist Ken Anzolar.

“For the past five years, the trend has fluctuated,” said Anzolar. Last year, there was no shortage of shots, but years such as the current flu season or in 2009 when the last sever flu outbreak hit California, the demand rises.

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The most recent fatal victim of the flu was a 45-year-old woman who lived in Santa Ana, according to Nicole Stanfield of the Orange County Health Care Agency.

The woman died during the past week, Stanfield said.

A 55-year-old La Habra man and a 51-year-old Fountain Valley man also died of influenza near the end of December, county health officials said.

The most recent victim, whose name was not released, did not have any other underlying medical issues, Stanfield said.

Rumors of a declining supply of flu shots are inaccurate, she said.

``We still have plenty of vaccines,'' Stanfield said. ``We've had a huge uptick in the number of people getting vaccinated.''

At the agency's clinic in the 1700 block of West 17th Street in Santa Ana, 4,220 flu shots have been given out between October and Thursday, Stanfield said.

Last year, the clinic gave out 2,456 shots from October through the end of January, Stanfield said. In 2010, the clinic provided 2,972 shots from October through Jan. 25, she said.

During the most recent severe flu season in 2009, 57 people died in Orange County of influenza, Stanfield said.

Vaccines often cost $20-$30; however, they are often covered by insurance.

Flu shots are an inactivated vaccine made from killed virus, which means it’s impossible to get the flu from the vaccine, according to Dr. Angela Rasmussen, an infectious disease expert.

There are currently three flu shots being produced in the U.S.: the regular (intramuscular) seasonal flu shot, a high-dose vaccine for people 65 and older, and an intradermal (injected into the skin) vaccine for people ages 18 to 64.

In addition, a nasal-spray flu vaccine made with live, weakened flu viruses (which also do not cause the flu) is available to healthy people ages 2 to 49 years old, except pregnant women.

The most common side effect from a flu shot is soreness at the injection site.

Even those who think they don't need a flu shot should get one anyway, according to Jack Cantlin, a pharmacist and the divisional vice president of retail clinical services at Walgreens. It's possible to contract the virus and carry it without being sick.

The elderly, young children, pregnant women and nursing home residents are at greater risk for serious complications from the flu. People with chronic medical conditions such as asthma, diabetes, cystic fibrosis and chronic lung disease—as well as those who work with them—are also at risk.

- City News Service contributed to this report.


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