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More Greek schools close due to H1N1 influenza

Tue, Oct 27 2009 13:00 CET 2161 Views 5 Comments
More Greek schools close due to H1N1 influenza

Photo: Zeathiel, sxc.hu

Following the closure of secondary schools in Athens and Thessaloniki, a school in the northeastern city of Alexandroupoli, close to the Turkish border, was temporarily sealed off on October 26 2009 after several students were identified as swine flu carriers, the Greek Kathimerini reported on October 27 2009.

In early October, schools in Metamorphosi, Athens, and Panorama, Thessaloniki as well as the town of Hania, on the island of Crete were closed, either partially or completely, because of the influenza. Additional outbreaks also forced the closure of private schools in the Greek capital earlier in October.

The Greek government maintains its stance that it wants to make the vaccination of all its citizens mandatory in spite of the fact that large swathes of the Greek population do not consider the epidemic all that important.

Greek health minister Dimitris Avramopoulos told Greek media that his government's aim was "to vaccinate all citizens and residents of the country without exception". He said that this would be accomplished by each citizen submitting a written application accompanied by a medical evaluation.

Greek authorities have already earmarked a 40 million euro package for vaccines and placed further orders with Novartis, GlaxoSmithKline and Sanofi for eight million vaccine doses.

Complications arise from the fact that, like Bulgaria, many people in the country who have contracted the strain, do not report it to authorities and so risk exposing others to the influenza. Additionally, a survey conducted in Greece by Kathimerini on October 5 showed that nearly a third of Greeks will not bother to get their free jab, while 50 per cent remained unconvinced it was necessary.

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Comments

Anonymous vanko Thu, Oct 29 2009 13:57 CET

Zerdacht - infected with what?? Even in the states they no longer record cases of H1N1 as they were so low and mixed them up with ordinary virus complaints and flu to make the situation seem much worse and scare people into getting a useless toxic vaccine that hasnt been properly tested will not cure or prevent the flu and just makes billions for the unconcerned Pharma giants who are worse than any mafia and kill far more with there toxic drugs. Ask them about autism and why didnt it exist prior to vaccine??

Anonymous Zerdacht Wed, Oct 28 2009 09:53 CET

Uweschule in Sofia closed today, bacause the Swine Flu. It seems that most of the kids are infected. At the moment they will be tested in a hospital.

Anonymous Ilian Tue, Oct 27 2009 20:53 CET

I'm glad the BG govt is not taking this Swine Flu thing too seriously and wasting their money on those poisonous vaccines.

Anonymous taxman Tue, Oct 27 2009 19:29 CET

BG 180.000doses ONLY!
compare greece,romania
that will give all citizens vaccine




Anonymous VANKO Tue, Oct 27 2009 14:30 CET

I wonder how much the Greek authorities are getting paid by big pharma. 40 mill is a lot of money for a struggling economy. But sod the economy when the authorities can line their own pockets. Those with money wont experience any financial crisis will they??? And people dont report it because in most cases its far milder than normal flu. I notice they dont mention any figures especially for deaths.


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