Posted By John Webster
A 'flu epidemic should always be part of the emergency planning for any business, and particularly so for those of us in the health & social care sector.
Not only would we loose staff to the 'flu, but patient numbers would increase and existing patients/clients who develop flu become more dependant. Add to this that many workers will be family people and if a child of the family is sick, that's a parent off work as well. Furthermore, the health & social care sector is heavily dependent on women working part time and often providing a second household income, so where there is a choice of which parent stays at home, it will disproportionately affect the part timers.
Add nursery and school closures and that's a significant proportion of the workforce missing.
Every winter we undertake vaccination programmes for those most vulnerable and staff are encouraged to take up the vaccine as well - this year all staff being vaccinated will be entered into a prize draw.
The vaccine is effective against "common or garden" strains of 'flu, but is likely to be ineffective against a new strain. Until there is an outbreak and the strain is identified, a vaccine against a new strain cannot be developed. Once it is, it takes several months for sufficient quantities to be available for mass vaccination.
The UK government has, for a change, been particularly pro-active in ordering and stockpiling millions of doses of anti-viral drugs (unlike most of the rest of the EU), which should be available to treat the vulnerable and key workers. These drugs would be our only defence in the first wave of a new-strain pandemic, but a vaccine should be ready for subsequent waves.
But some of the figures flying about are just scaremongering when taken out of context. Avian flu' has directly infected some 60+ people in the World (hardly a threat), of which half have died, and most were fit, younger people. Popular press inference: If 25% of the population gets avian 'flu (typical for a pandemic), then half will die, that's over 7 million people in the UK !!!!. As it affects working age people then we will loose our working population. The fact is, the only victims so far are poultry workers, ie people of working age in very close contact with vast numbers of infected birds. Should the disease become transmissible between humans IT WILL NO LONGER BE AVIAN FLU, but a new strain of human 'flu in its own right. So there is no reason to believe that, if it did happen, the new strain would be any worse than pandemics of the past, and that means planning for loss of about a third of staff at any one time.
As for me, I will be taking the routine vaccine, stocking up on paracetamol and hot Toddys at home, brushing up my manual handling to be available as a stand-in hospital porter, and making sure the duty manager knows how to enter this forum to ask for help if I'm laid up or snuff it.
John