In a sign that vaccine shortages might be easing, the Minnesota Department of Health is expected to announce Tuesday that it is expanding the number of high-risk target groups eligible for H1N1 immunizations.
Thousands more Minnesota kids were immunized against the H1N1 flu Saturday, a process that apparently went smoothly across the Twin Cities.
Today, Fairview Clinics will offer walk-in vaccination at its locations in Minneapolis, Bloomington, Fridley, Eagan and Wyoming, and other clinics are planned.
Metro counties roll out H1N1 flu-shot clinics for children.
Although federal health officials decline to use the word "peaked," the current wave of H1N1 flu appears to have done so in the United States. Flu activity is coming down in all regions of the country, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said Friday, though it is still rising in Hawaii, Maine and some isolated areas.
When the nation's swine flu vaccination program began in early October, health officials predicted it was going to be "messy." They were right.
The flu pandemic may be on its way out for now, but that didn't stop thousands of kids from showing up for H1N1 immunizations Wednesday at vaccination clinics in Anoka and Hennepin counties..
Don't like shots? There's a nasal spray version of the vaccine, called FluMist, available for people ages 2 to 49.
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