A Matter of Public Health: Physicians Make Case for Vaccinating Immigrants in Custody

For three days last week, physicians from around the country led demonstrations and a vigil outside of Customs Patrol and Border Protection (CBP) facilities in the San Diego area. After receiving no response to their repeated offers to the departments of Health and Human Services and Homeland Security to provide free flu vaccinations to immigrants in custody, the physicians (and a few NPs) had come to the border with donated influenza vaccine to press for a pilot vaccination program. CBP officials finally said they would pass the request up their chain of command.

Preventable deaths, plus a matter of the larger public health.

Three migrant children died in CBP detention centers during last year’s flu season. The last hours of 16-year-old Carlos Gregorio Hernandez Vasquez, who died in May of influenza, were documented on a grim surveillance camera video that recently circulated widely on the Internet. But the issue of influenza vaccination for migrants is not “merely” one of such preventable deaths; it is a  public health issue. This year’s flu season has ramped up in recent weeks, and a “window of opportunity” for vaccinating this vulnerable population is closing.

The CDC recommends that everyone six months of age and older receive influenza vaccination each year. […]

Mid-October Rainy Thursday Web Roundup

By Jacob Molyneux, blog editor/senior editor

The nursosphere is thriving and Change of Shift, the always interesting compendium of what’s new on nursing blogs, is up over at Emergiblog.

The health care reform process creeps slowly but surely toward an end someone somewhere can surely envision. One crucial question many are still asking is whether insurance companies might serve consumers a bit more readily and agreeably if they were forced to face a little competition from a public option. After all, isn’t competition supposed to be a good thing?

Most experts don’t expect the H1N1 vaccine to pose any more danger than the seasonal flu vaccine; even so, many Americans (and nurses commenting here, or taking our poll about the mandatory vaccine) continue to be wary, prompting public health officials to engage in especially aggressive surveillance measures in order to quickly detect any possible negative reactions to the vaccine: “Government Keeps Close Eye on Swine Flu Vaccine.”

AJN clinical editor Christine Moffa posted here a while back about how meditation might help cranky or exhausted or overworked nurses stay focused on what matters during the workday. Today the NY Times has a related piece on “doctor burnout” and meditation.

The role of social media in health care is constantly evolving as we all find our way. Its use by hospital workers is at issue in a recent post at Running a Hospital, about one hospital’s decision to ban social media from all its computers. And here’s something else on this: blogger Not Nurse Ratched wonders if social media policies in […]

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