Meningitis Vaccine in Demand at Colleges
Posted on: Tuesday, 29 August 2006, 06:00 CDT
By PATRICK WALTERS
PHILADELPHIA - As move-in day for freshmen approached, Linda Echols took stock of health supplies at Swarthmore College and thought she had plenty of the latest meningitis vaccine.
But as the date drew closer, she looked more carefully and saw the vaccine had expired. She frantically called doctor's offices and hospitals to try to get some before freshmen started piling into dormitories on Tuesday, but had no luck.
"It's like the flu shot - they create a demand that they can't meet," said Echols, director of the campus health center.
The government recommends the vaccine Menactra, which prevents a form of bacterial meningitis, for college freshmen in dorms and younger children. With manufacturer Sanofi Pasteur struggling this year to keep up with the need, some students and colleges have found the vaccine harder to find.
In 2005, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended that more than 8 million U.S. children get vaccinated against meningitis.
Several states, including Massachusetts, New Jersey, Virginia, Maryland and Louisiana, have enacted laws in recent years requiring the vaccine for college students. In Pennsylvania, college students living in dorms must either be vaccinated or sign a waiver saying that they chose not to and understand the risks.
"Everybody knew, because of the way people get vaccines, that there could be a gap in the supply and demand in this back-to-school time frame," said Donna Cary, a spokeswoman for Sanofi Pasteur.
The company plans to manufacture 6 million doses of Menactra this year and 7 million next year. "The problem is ... we can't ship it all in August," Cary said.
Menactra, licensed by the Food and Drug Administration last year, provides more effective protection for more years - about eight - than the older vaccine.
Meningitis affects relatively few people, but college freshmen have the country's highest rate with about five cases per 100,000. Group living in close quarters makes it easier to spread.
The disease is rare but devastating. There are about 300 meningitis deaths a year in the United States. Those who survive often suffer severe complications, such as organ failure and tissue damage requiring amputation.
Alice Gray, director of the immunization program at the Pennsylvania Health Department, said more people are finding out about the vaccine this year, leading to spot shortages nationwide.
"It took off very quickly and a lot more quickly than Sanofi thought it would, I believe," Gray said. "Their manufacturing didn't quite keep up."
Nevertheless, many schools say that they are able to meet the demand and state officials believe there will be enough supplies.
---
On the Net:
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/DBMD/diseaseinfo/meningococcal-g.htm
Source: Associated Press/AP Online
Related Articles
- ConnectEDU Partners with QuestBridge to Offer More College Planning Tools to Low-Income Students
- Health Matters, From Sanofi-Aventis
- Mental Health 101: Massachusetts Psychiatric Society Offers Expertise on College Mental Health
- Soliant Health Makes Second Annual Contribution to Georgia State University College of Health and Human Sciences
- More Choose 2-Year Colleges: Tech Programs and Tuition Lure Students
- Soliant Health Contributes to Georgia State University College of Health and Human Sciences
- Meningococcal Vaccine for Adolescents and College Freshmen
- Wheelock College Offers Emergency Enrollment to Displaced Students
- Meningitis Vaccine Supply Too Low to Meet Demand New Drug Gives Better Protection
- National Foundation for Infectious Diseases Applauds New, Stronger Recommendations For Influenza Vaccination of the Nation's Health Care Workers
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds