October 24, 2009 5:43 PM

Obama Declares National Emergency for H1N1

(AP)  Last Updated 4:28 p.m. ET

President Barack Obama declared the swine flu outbreak a national emergency, giving his health chief the power to let hospitals move emergency rooms offsite to speed treatment and protect noninfected patients.

The declaration, signed Friday night and announced Saturday, comes with the disease more prevalent than ever in the U.S. and production delays undercutting the government's initial, optimistic estimates that as many as 120 million doses of the vaccine could be available by mid-October.

Health authorities say more than 1,000 people in the United States, including almost 100 children, have died from the flu, known as H1N1, and 46 states have widespread flu activity. So far only 11 million vaccine doses have gone out to health departments, doctor's offices and other providers, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials.

Administration officials said the declaration was a pre-emptive move designed to make decisions easier when they need to be made. Officials said the move was not in response to any single development.

CBSNews.com Special Report: H1N1 Virus

Health and Human Services chief Kathleen Sebelius now has authority to bypass federal rules when opening alternative care sites, such as offsite hospital centers at schools or community centers if hospitals seek permission.

Some hospitals have opened drive-thrus and drive-up tent clinics to screen and treat swine flu patients. The idea is to keep infectious people out of regular emergency rooms and away from other sick patients.

Hospitals could modify patient rules — for example, requiring them to give less information during a hectic time — to quicken access to treatment, with government approval, under the declaration.

It also addresses a financial question for hospitals — reimbursement for treating people at sites not typically approved. For instance, federal rules do not allow hospitals to put up treatment tents more than 250 yards away from the doors; if the tents are 300 yards or more away, typically federal dollars won't go to pay for treatment.

Administration officials said those rules might not make sense while fighting the swine flu, especially if the best piece of pavement is in the middle of a parking lot and some medical centers already are putting in place parts of their emergency plans.

The national emergency declaration was the second of two steps needed to give Sebelius extraordinary powers during a crisis.

On April 26, the administration declared swine flu a public health emergency, allowing the shipment of roughly 12 million doses of flu-fighting medications from a federal stockpile to states in case they eventually needed them. At the time, there were 20 confirmed cases in the U.S. of people recovering easily. There was no vaccine against swine flu, but the CDC had taken the initial step necessary for producing one.

"As a nation, we have prepared at all levels of government, and as individuals and communities, taking unprecedented steps to counter the emerging pandemic," President Obama wrote in Saturday's declaration.

He said the pandemic keeps evolving, the rates of illness are rising rapidly in many areas and there's a potential "to overburden health care resources."

The government now hopes to have about 50 million doses of swine flu vaccine out by mid-November and 150 million in December. The flu virus has to be grown in chicken eggs, and the yield hasn't been as high as was initially hoped, officials have said.

"Many millions" of Americans have had swine flu so far, according to an estimate that CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden gave Friday. The government doesn't test everyone to confirm swine flu so it doesn't have an exact count. He also said there have been more than 20,000 hospitalizations.


For more info:
H1N1 Flu Update (CDC)
flu.gov

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 44 Comments
by ShazmiAngels7 October 24, 2009 8:58 PM EDT
by charlie7381 October 24, 2009 3:07 PM EDT
Here's what I thinks going on anyway: Fer years and years doctors have been making vaccines with animal tissue. Bird flu? Monkey virus? Thats how this stuff is crossing over. But nobody's intelligent to tell them smart allecy doctors they're wrong.
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Exactly 100 percent correct my dear kings wisdom abound...
Reply to this comment
by puzzler125 October 24, 2009 8:26 PM EDT
After reading the article yesterday that stated that if you've been diagnosed with H1N1 or even flu it was probably wrong I'm even more skeptical.
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by bigsk8fan October 24, 2009 8:23 PM EDT
and for no particular reason, republicans object again. all they need to hear as that obama and democrats are doing something for americans. and republicans figure they need to put a stop to this.
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by FauxNews October 24, 2009 6:33 PM EDT
Yes We Can, Eventually do something
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by armyoftwelve October 24, 2009 8:05 PM EDT
Let's begin "THE WAR ON HIN1!!!!!"
by sgburns October 24, 2009 6:09 PM EDT
Isn't this guy great, always right on the ball..quick to take action, stands tall and in charge for all Americans...this must be why he was awarded the Noble Peace Prize..yeah, thats it..uh hum...
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by nowhiningallowed October 24, 2009 3:24 PM EDT
Hopefully this preemptive strategy will help. It's too bad that the amount of vaccine we were told would be ready is substantially off the mark.
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by kenhamlett October 24, 2009 3:20 PM EDT
The part that needs to be stressed is that the Vaccine might protect you personally after it has conditioned the immune system but it does not stop the alleged pandemic. People that are sick should simply stay home and not keep going out spreading it around until they are too sick to walk. This is true for any form of the Flu. A pandemic is the result of the thoughtless person as much as it is caused by a virus. The vaccine does not cure stupidity.
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by nowhiningallowed October 24, 2009 5:48 PM EDT
That's the problem in how these things get spread. People may not know they're ill and spreading the illness, while others are too selfish to care at all about possibly infecting others and spreading their illness. I agree, the vaccine doesn't cure stupidity - if only a vaccine could be made for that, probably all of our "ills" could be stopped.
by FauxNews October 24, 2009 6:52 PM EDT
Great advice to all the waitresses and factory workers who either can't afford to stay home, or would be fired if they didn't show up to work. And, hopefully these altruistic people you are talking about will also stay out of the grocery if there is no food or medicine in their house. Get real; people have contacted people since people began. Stopping a pandemic requires government action. Unfortunately, we have a government that thinks ?promote the general welfare? means make craters in the deserts on the other side of the planet.
by charlie7381 October 24, 2009 3:12 PM EDT
And you think you can build nations?
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by charlie7381 October 24, 2009 3:11 PM EDT
Yup.. you geniuses demonstrate time and time again.. with yer glamor.. how secularism fails.
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by charlie7381 October 24, 2009 3:08 PM EDT
Who's gonna tell a guy driving a Porche he's wrong? Not me.
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