The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Carthage, Jasper County

October 23, 2009

State department grants exemption for flu vaccine

By Wally Kennedy

wkennedy@joplinglobe.com

In a move that is sure to generate controversy, Missouri’s top public health official granted an exemption Thursday that allows pregnant women and parents of children younger than 3 to choose whether to receive H1N1 flu vaccine containing a mercury-based preservative.

Critics of the mercury-based vaccine lobbied the state Legislature a few years ago to prevent its use because of alleged connections to childhood autism.

Dr. Keith Grebe, medical director at McCune-Brooks Regional Hospital, praised the relaxation of the rule on Friday.

Clinic canceled

“We had a clinic scheduled for (Friday) at McCune-Brooks where up to 80 patients, including pregnant women, would have received the (H1N1) vaccine with the preservative in it because the supply of vaccine without the preservative is in very short supply,’’ he said.

“We had to cancel the clinic scheduled for today because we were technically breaking the law.’’

Grebe said the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services received pressure from all across the state to release the vaccine for pregnant women.

“The vaccine now will be available to pregnant if they choose to take it,’’ he said. “They may choose to wait for the preservative-free vaccine that will come out, but at least they can make that choice now.’’

Grebe said a national obstetric association on Oct. 20 said the preservative in the H1N1 vaccine is safe for pregnant mothers.

Grebe said there is no doubt this is a serious issue for pregnant women.

“Some of our patients have been very emotionally upset that this vaccine was not available to them,’’ he said. “I am not certain of the latest numbers, but as best as I can recall there have been at least 26 H1N1 deaths among pregnant women in this country.’’

Grebe said pregnant schoolteachers are especially concerned about the unavailability of vaccine to them because they are encountering sick children in their schools every day.

“I know half a dozen people who have gone to get the vaccine,” he said. “A large percentage of pregnant women we see will obtain it as soon as possible.’’

Temporary exception

Margaret Donnelly, director of the state Department of Health and Senior Services, determined that a shortage of preservative-free vaccine was preventing pregnant women and young children from obtaining the new H1N1 vaccine.

Donnelly’s action temporarily sets aside a statute that prohibited pregnant women and children younger than 3 from receiving vaccine with this preservative.

The statute also allows the health director to set aside the ban in certain circumstances, including a pandemic or a shortage of vaccine. The waiver will remain in effect until the preservative-free vaccine becomes available.

“The H1N1 flu is now widespread throughout Missouri,” Donnelly said. “We know that pregnant women and young children are the most susceptible to this illness. But delays in vaccine production have created a situation where the most vulnerable people were left without vaccine protection.”

Donnelly urged women and the parents of young children to consult their health care provider to determine whether any vaccine is appropriate for them.

Trickle of vaccine

Vaccine is trickling into the Joplin area, but it is being distributed directly to local medical providers who are getting it to high-priority patients, including pregnant women.

“We encourage our residents to be patient, and continue to practice the preventive measures to help protect themselves and others from this flu, as well as the seasonal flu,” said Dan Pekarek, director of the Joplin Health Department.

“Because we have a multitude of medical providers that provide services to the high-risk populations daily, the local vaccine allocations are being sent to them first to try and meet their needs,” he said. “More rural counties around us, with fewer medical providers, do not have that issue, and their health departments are the primary flu vaccine providers.”

Shipments of the vaccine to this area will continue, but local health officials do not have control over the quantities they receive.

“This is a week-to-week issue for us,’’ he said. “Our allocation this week was less than the previous week. We are being told production and distribution will catch up.’’







Local ERs busy

A spokesman for St. John’s Regional Medical Center in Joplin on Friday said the emergency department is seeing between 30 to 50 flu-like patients per day. That rate remains unchanged from last week.

At Freeman Hospital West, a spokeswoman said the emergency department last week was seeing 18 to 20 patients per day with flu-like symptoms and that roughly seven patients per day were being diagnosed with influenza. This week, the hospital is seeing about 35 to 37 patients per day with flu-like symptoms and that roughly 11 patients per day are being diagnosed with influenza.

Text Only
Carthage, Jasper County
  • Jim-Spradling-obit.jpg Carthage attorney, reformer of revenue department, dies

    James R. Spradling, a Carthage attorney who was noted for his reform of the Missouri Department of Revenue in the 1970s, died at 5:50 a.m. Monday at McCune-Brooks Regional Hospital.

    August 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • Bondswoman charged with false imprisonment

    A bail bondswoman from Carthage is facing a charge of false imprisonment for allegedly attempting to put a man in jail without a judge’s order, then taking him home and handcuffing him to the banister of a staircase until a friend of the man paid her his bond money.

    January 4, 2012

  • Man’s last statement to be given to defendant

    A judge ruled Monday that the Jasper County prosecutor must provide attorneys for Darren J. Winans with a videotaped statement co-defendant Matthew D. Laurin made about the Sheldon murders shortly before killing himself.

    August 23, 2010

  • Carthage proposes 1.6-cent rise in city property tax

    A drop in the assessed value of Carthage real estate will translate to an increase of about 1.6 cents in the city’s proposed property tax rate.

    August 9, 2010

  • Open house to celebrate projects at courthouse

    Projects completed last year at the Jasper County Courthouse will be celebrated in ceremonies Thursday in the courthouse lobby.
    County officials will join representatives of local chambers of commerce and others for a ribbon-cutting and open house to mark the opening of a Route 66 display in the lobby and a new “peace star” atop the building.

    May 9, 2010

  • Newton County Jail State budget cuts reduce county funds

    County officials are bracing for more state budget cuts to translate into a loss of county revenues.
    In an effort to balance Missouri’s budget, the state earlier this year cut the amount it reimburses county assessors for work to determine property values. The budget approved by lawmakers for fiscal 2011 calls for cutting the amount the state reimburses counties to house prisoners bound for state lockup.

    May 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • Jo Ellis: County home to rare yellowwood tree

    In late spring, drifts as white as snow fill the gutters and curbs on the east side of the Jasper County Courthouse. It isn’t snow, of course; it’s the fallen petals of the yellowwood tree that grows squarely in front of the door to the Jasper County Extension office.

    May 9, 2010

  • Jasper County Commission gets building project update

    Plans to close out one building project and start another were reviewed by the Jasper County Commission last week.
    Darieus Adams, Western District associate commissioner, met Thursday with officials of the firm who designed a $292,400 project to upgrade the lighting and make other changes to make four county-owned buildings more energy efficient.

    May 8, 2010

  • Two men running for associate judge in 39th Circuit take case to court

    Two men running for associate judge in Missouri’s 39th Circuit began battling it out in a Jasper County courtroom this week.
    Jasper County Circuit Judge Gayle Crane heard arguments Wednesday concerning the disclosure of documents sought by Robert “Bobby” George, Aurora, the current Lawrence County prosecutor.

    May 7, 2010

  • Carthage tiger Unveiling ceremony celebrates CHS tiger

    Kandy Frazier, Carthage High School principal, summed it up once the new addition to the CHS campus was unveiled Thursday.
    The bronze tiger sculpture created by Carthage artist and sculptor Bob Tommey, she said, is the kind of work that would be found at a big university.

    May 6, 2010 1 Photo