OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — State prison officials have asked for about 15,000 doses of swine flu vaccine but state health officials say none has been provided and there are no plans to do so yet.
Corrections Department spokesman Jerry Massie says one inmate arrived at a state prison with the H1N1 virus and is recovering in isolation. Massie says the inmates are at high risk because of their confinement.
However, state Health Department spokesman Larry Weatherford says the state plans no vaccine for prisoners until it's given to those who are high priority in the general population.
Half of Oklahoma's population is in the priority category for the vaccine. They are pregnant women, those 6 months to 18 years old, custodial parents who care for children under 6 months, people who are up to 24 years old, people who are 19 to 64 years old with medical conditions, health care workers who work with critically ill people and emergency medical services workers.
___
Information from: The Oklahoman, http://www.newsok.com
Oklahoma News
November 4, 2009
State prisons ask for swine flu vaccine
- Oklahoma News
-
- Court to hear appeal of soldier’s Iraq murder verdict
-
Allen execution set for Feb. 16
- Tahlequah lawmaker seeks end to newspaper exemption
- State may spend $110M to curb prison growth
- Fallin supports Canadian pipeline
- Lawmaker plans to revise bill prohibiting Sharia law
- Appeals court strikes down ban on Sharia law
- Judge waives hearing on fraud, perjury charges
- College dropouts costing millions
- DHS panel approves lawsuit settlement
- More Oklahoma News Headlines







