East suburban-area schools await H1N1 vaccine

Bill Mccleery

October 29, 2009 by Bill Mccleery | Star staff

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Districts prepare to conduct clinics as soon as they receive mist, shots

Area schools are planning their own vaccination clinics for the H1N1 virus, but they cannot yet select dates for the clinics because of shortages of vaccine.

Greenfield-Central, Mount Vernon, Southern Hancock and Warren Township school districts all are planning flu-shot clinics.

Mount Vernon Community Schools has experienced the highest student absence rates in the area due to illness.

“We sent home permission slips with parents a couple weeks ago, and I hope we have a lot of parents send it in, so we can get these kids vaccinated,” said Mount Vernon Superintendent Bill Riggs.

Mount Vernon Intermediate School saw a 27 percent absence rate on Oct. 13, due largely to students with flulike symptoms. The rate had fallen to less than 20 percent a few days later, however. Mount Vernon Middle School had a 19 percent absence rate on Oct. 13, the day when district illness rates appeared to spike.

“So far it’s been manageable,” Riggs said. Typical absence rates are around 5 percent, he said.

“They say to go ahead and get vaccinated even if you’ve had the flu, because you don’t know if it necessarily was H1N1,” Riggs said.

In the Southern Hancock district, New Palestine Elementary School’s absence rate surpassed 20 percent on Oct. 16, said Superintendent Jim Halik.

By the next school day, however, the school’s rate was returning to normal. That’s the only one of the district’s five school buildings where officials have seen a major change in attendance, Halik said.

Like Mount Vernon, the Southern Hancock district is collecting parental permission slips and hoping vaccine supplies arrive soon.

In the Greenfield-Central district, the highest absentee rate experienced by a school has been 13 percent, recorded on Oct. 22 at J.B. Stephens Elementary School.

The Hancock County Health Department is as frustrated as school officials by the lack of the vaccine, said Jerry Kieffer, a Health Department nurse.

“We’re just like the rest of the state and whole country,” Kieffer said. “We’re just at the mercy of whenever it gets to us.”

The shipments come from the Indiana State Department of Health, he said. H1N1 and seasonal flu vaccines each come in both injectable and nasal mist form.

The county Health Department distributes H1N1 vaccine to area providers who have signed up to receive the vaccine, Kieffer said.

For the seasonal flu, the department also offers its own vaccination clinics, providing vaccinations free of charge but asking anyone who is able to contribute to give $13 toward covering the administrative costs of continuing the clinics next year. The agency has received grant money covering the cost of this year’s clinics, he said.

To keep up to date on when vaccines are available, Kieffer advised residents to monitor the Web sites of Hancock Regional Hospital (www.hancockregional hospital.org) and the Hancock County Health Department (www.hancockcoin gov.org/health_department).

Warren Township schools so far have seen no dramatic spikes in student absences and continue to average about a 5 percent absentee rate, said Dena Cushenberry, assistant superintendent for primary education.

Categories: Greenfield, Hancock County, Communities

Tags: 

hancock county health department, flu shot clinics, new palestine elementary school, county health department, palestine elementary school, j b stephens elementary school, vaccination clinics, absence rates, permission slips, stephens elementary school, student absence, vaccine supplies, illness rates, halik, parental permission, next school, kieffer, intermediate school, school buildings, mount vernon middle school, greenfield, Hancock County, Communities

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