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Survey finds two problems: satisfying those who want H1N1 protection and convincing others they need it.
WASHINGTON - About 40 percent of American parents have tried to get their children vaccinated against the H1N1 flu virus, but only one in three have been successful, according to a survey released Friday. High-risk adults seeking the vaccine for themselves were just as unlucky finding it.
At the same time, about half of adults continue to express little interest in the vaccine now or later.
The survey by the Harvard School of Public Heath sketches a U.S. population split between people who are frustrated because they can't find the vaccine, and those who say they don't want it even when it arrives.
Both groups present major challenges to public health -- one to satisfy and the other to convince.
Production of vaccine against the novel H1N1 flu strain is going much more slowly than anticipated because the virus grows so slowly. As of Friday, there were 38 million doses available, which was an increase of 11 million over a week ago. Next week, about 8 million more doses will arrive, said Anne Schuchat, a physician and epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The federal government, which is buying all the pandemic vaccine and then distributing it to state and city health departments, has ordered 250 million doses from the manufacturers.
The brightest spot in the survey was the finding that 92 percent of the people who have unsuccessfully sought vaccination say they will try again. At a new media briefing Friday, Schuchat said she was heartened by that statistic.
"They weren't giving up. They recognize the value of trying to protect themselves with vaccine and sticking with it through the next several weeks," she said.
The survey, conducted by phone on Oct. 30, 31 and Nov. 1, polled 1,073 adults age 18 and over. In theory, the sample represents the views of the entire American population within a margin of error of about 4 percentage points.
Alberta Health Services says a second staff member has been fired for helping set up a private clinic for Calgary Flames players and their families to get the H1N1 flu vaccine while thousands of Albertans waited in line for the shots.
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