China Reports 91 More Deaths from A/H1N1 Flu
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Students of Fudan University are injected with the vaccine against the A/H1N1 flu in Shanghai, east China, on December 23, 2009. The vaccination campaign against the A/H1N1 flu virus was launched in late November among colleges and universities in Shanghai. Some 37 percent of 640,000 students and teachers here have already consented to receive the vaccine injections. [Xinhua]
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A total of 6,129 A/H1N1 flu cases were reported during the period. A/H1N1 accounted for 87.5 percent of flu cases, a minor drop from the week before last, said the notice on the ministry's official website.
Pregnant women accounted for 8.7 percent of severe cases of theA/H1N1 influenza and 15.7 percent of deaths during this period, it said.
Many places across the country still had a high incidence of the A/H1N1 flu, the notice said, urging people, especially pregnant women, to get inoculated according to the schedules of local health departments.
Bian Xuming, director of maternity department in Peking Union Medical College Hospital, suggested pregnant women promptly receive vaccinations against the flu and take all preventive measures.
"Pregnant women have low immunity and emergency response ability as their organs already bear heavy burdens, leaving them more vulnerable.
"Once they catch the flu, the illness will progress rapidly and they will be in more danger. That's why prevention is more important," Bian said.
As of Monday, almost 40.6 million people nationwide had been inoculated against the A/H1N1 flu while more than 75.2 million doses of vaccines had been approved for use.