Who does the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recommend vaccinating?
Is there enough flu shots for everybody? The CDC prioritizes vaccinating people over 50, the chronically ill, and health care workers, and encourages “when feasible” children between 6 and 24 months. This covers about 180 million people. This year 83 million flu shots were produced, and in a typical year over half of them go to people who are not in the priority groups. This is the challenge we all face–there were never enough flu shots to go around. In past years several million flu shots are discarded, which explains the public health officials’ stance of urging people to get a flu shot. The publicity surrouding the flu outbreak this year, however, meant that we are out of flu vaccine. 5. Should my child have been offered a flu shot at a prior visit? Our vaccine supply is subject to the vagaries of the private sector supply. Each year we are able to prepurchase a certain number of vaccines before the start of flu season. Typically this covers our high-risk children, but not our 6-24
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- Who does the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recommend vaccinating?