Obama declares flu 'emergency
President Barack Obama has declared the swine flu outbreak a national emergency, allowing hospitals and local governments to speedily set up alternate sites and procedures if needed to handle any surge of patients, the White House said Saturday.
The declaration came as public health officials began a widespread vaccination program.
Flu activity ' virtually all of it swine flu ' is now widespread in 46 states, a level that federal officials say equals the peak of a typical winter flu season. Millions of people in the United States have had swine flu, known as H1N1, either in the first wave in the spring or the current wave.
Although no one has an exact count of the flu's mortality, Dr. Thomas R. Frieden of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday that it had killed more than 1,000 Americans and hospitalized more than 20,000.
The emergency declaration, which Obama signed Friday night, has to do only with hospital treatment, not with the vaccine.
A spokesman for the CDC, David Daigle, said he had not heard of any hospital that has faced a surge of patients so large that it had to set up a triage area or a treatment unit off-site. He knew of hospitals in Texas and Tennessee that had set up triage tents in their parking lots to screen patients with fever or other flu symptoms, but those have been on hospital grounds, he said.
Against this backdrop, administration officials emphasized that Obama's declaration was largely a bureaucratic move that did not signify any unanticipated worsening of the outbreak of the H1N1 flu nationwide. Nor, they said, does it have anything to do with recent vaccine shortages.
"This is not a response to any new developments," said Reid Cherlin, a White House spokesman. "It's an important tool in our kit going forward."
Public and private health officials were administering swine flu shots at scores of locations around the country this weekend.
In Chicago, health officials began giving free vaccinations at six City College locations Saturday, and within hours officials were turning away hundreds of people because supplies had been exhausted.
Health officials said they distributed 1,500 doses at each of the sites and that they began the vaccinations at 9 a.m. But two hours before the centers opened, there were already hundreds of people waiting in line for the numbered cards that were needed to get the vaccination. With the number of patients outrunning the supply, officials said they would give priority to patients who fell into the higher-risk groups.
Seasonal flu typically hospitalizes 200,000 people in the United States each year and kills 36,000. But more than 90 percent of the deaths from seasonal flu are among the elderly, while swine flu mostly affects the young.
The country is in the midst of a serious shortage of swine flu vaccine; only about 16 million doses are available. There is no overall shortage of seasonal flu vaccine ' 85 million doses have already shipped, and the regular flu season has not started. But there are temporary local shortages.
The president's signature on the emergency declaration fulfills the second of two conditions necessary under federal law to empower Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, to issue waivers expediting health care facilities' ability to transfer patients to other locations. The first condition was met in April when the Department of Health and Human Services declared a public health emergency, which Sebelius renewed for a second time Tuesday.
The declaration allows hospitals to apply to the Department of Health and Human Services for waivers from laws that in normal times are intended to protect patients' privacy and to ensure that they are not discriminated against based on their source of payment for care, including Medicare, Medicaid and the states' Children's Health Insurance Program.
As a practical matter, officials said, the waiver could allow a hospital in danger of being overwhelmed with swine flu patients to remove them, and any emergency room visitors suspected of having the illness, to a location such as a local armory to segregate such cases for treatment.
In a few cases, hospitals already have set up tents on their sites. But under federal law, if the patients are sent off-site, the hospital might be refused reimbursement for the care as a sanction.
