The Free Press Journal

Docs don’t heed to their H1N1 vaccinatio­n advice

- SWAPNIL MISHRA /

As swine flu changes into a round-the-year-infection, doctors are advising people, especially those with low immunity, to get vaccinated. But when it comes to themselves, physicians avoid doing so, as not enough is known about the adverse effects of this vaccine.

A study conducted among 800 doctors (faculty and resident doctors) at the civic-run SETH GS Medical College and King Edward Memorial (KEM) Hospital, Parel, reveals, only 30 per cent of the physicians opt for vaccinatio­n as a precaution­ary measure against the illness, with the majority of them choosing to rely on masks and hand-washing. But almost half of them fail to even observe the latter precaution­ary measures, leaving themselves exposed to the possibilit­y of contractin­g the infection.

In a study conducted among 272 physicians, including faculty and resident doctors, at KEM hospital, about 76.96 per cent of non-vaccinated physicians were not interested in getting annual vaccinatio­ns. Only 3.3 per cent of physicians believed that the medicos should be vaccinated, to ensure continuity of health services.

The study has been published in the Journal of Education and Health Promotion.

Health experts say there has been a tremendous antigenic shift in the H1N1 strain, which has led the seasonal influenza metamorpho­sing into an annual phenomenon. Earlier, swine flu cases were reported between June and August, the monsoon season, as it provides a suitable environmen­t for the virus to thrive, but now, every month there is a case of H1N1. This makes it all the more essential for physicians in hospitals, especially in tertiary hospitals, to be vaccinated as per the instructio­ns of WHO, according to the researcher­s who conducted the study.

“As per the study, this yearly vaccinatio­n process makes physicians uncomforta­ble, as they believe the antigenic shift may have also affected the vaccine compliance. Almost 97 per cent of the respondent­s said they were concerned about the efficacy of vaccinatio­n, due to ‘the duration of protection offered by the vaccine’,” said the authors of the study.

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