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Cattails
September/October 2000
CONTENTS
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Back to Cover
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About Cattails
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TeleHealth brings specialists to outlying centers
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Study evaluates need to repair groin hernias
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Positive discipline maintains children's self-esteem
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Marshfield researchers helped map human genome, now seek disease-causing genes
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Gamma Knife a new treatment for brain tumors
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New Marshfield Clinic program assures food safety from farm to table
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Flu shots now practical for some people with egg allergy
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Saving your sight: New treatment improves macular degeneration outcomes
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New faces
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Marshfield Clinic Calendar of Events
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Flu shots now practical for some people with egg allergy

Eggs

As influenza season approaches, many people will consider getting the flu shot to protect them from the misery of the illness. However, for people with allergy to eggs, the protection the flu shot offers has been limited by potentially severe side effects.

Because the vaccine is grown inside unfertilized eggs, it contains a small amount of egg protein. That doesn't mean protection from flu is out of reach for people with egg allergy, said Mark Huftel, M.D., an allergist at Marshfield Clinic-Wausau Center. It means extra care must be used when giving the vaccine. Although the vaccine can contain egg protein, an allergist can determine whether it still is possible to receive the flu shot, he said.

Each year the flu vaccine changes to help prevent specific strains of flu. Therefore, the amount of egg in the vaccine also may change. Dr. Huftel and other Marshfield Clinic allergists can do a skin test to determine if a patient reacts to the specific flu vaccine. If the skin test is negative, it's easy to administer the vaccine, he said. Other patients may be given a small portion of the vaccine and watched for any sign of reaction. If all goes well, they can receive the balance of the inoculation, Dr. Huftel said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in Atlanta, recommends the vaccine for children and adults who are at high-risk for complications from influenza. This includes chronic conditions of the heart, lungs, diabetes and kidney disease. Family members of those at high risk also should be vaccinated, Dr. Huftel said. The CDC is recommending flu vaccines for more people, lowering the age to start receiving it from 65 to 50 and encouraging women who will be in their second or third trimester of pregnancy during flu season to be vaccinated.

Those are good guidelines, Dr. Huftel said. The vaccine also helps people without serious risk factors. "It's cost-effective as far as reducing absenteeism in the workplace," he said. "That's why many companies offer flu shots free of charge to their employees." New treatments are available for people who get the flu, but the focus of health care still is on prevention, he said.

 

Need a Flu Shot?

The Centers for Disease Control has warned that there may be a delay in receiving shipments of influenza vaccine. Individuals at high risk for complications from influenza and their close contacts can arrange to get flu shots at regular health care visits or by appointment as soon as the vaccine is available. Marshfield Clinic anticipates receiving a full supply of influenza vaccine. However, if a full supply does not become available, vaccinations may need to be limited to people in the high risk group noted above and their caregivers. Please see Marshfield Clinic's schedule of Flu Shot Clinics, which will begin in mid -November. In addition, some Marshfield Clinic sites are planning alternate dates should our supply of vaccine not arrive by the earliest scheduled clinic date. Please call your local Marshfield Clinic site for up-to-date information on available influenza vaccine, or check the Flu Shot schedule on Clinic's web site: www.marshfieldclinic.org/flushot/.

 

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