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Swine flu cases have cracked 1000 in New Zealand for the first time as the Government announced this afternoon it will spend millions securing a swine flu vaccine to protect frontline staff.
The Ministry of Health said confirmed cases now totalled 1059 nationwide, but reiterated that the actual number of cases was likely to be much higher as only a small proportion of people were now being tested.
Wellington continues to be the swine flu capital with a cumulative total of 301 cases, Auckland has 249 while Canterbury has 238. Globally, there are 89,921 recorded cases.
As of yesterday there were 5298 confirmed cases in Australia.
However it is unlikely to be available until December as a result of the licensing process.
Prime Minister John Key told reporters the government had ordered 300,000 doses of a vaccine from Baxter Healthcare – enough to give 150,000 people the required two doses.There were no plans for a national campaign as the swine flu was relatively minor.
The new figures come in the wake of renewed concern over the virus following three swine flu-related deaths in New Zealand which were revealed at the weekend. The targeted campaign aimed at supporting frontline services in health, emergency and other critical services.At risk groups such as asthmatics were not at this stage to get the vaccine.
Mr Ryall said the 1059 caseload figure was the “tip of the iceberg” because there was less testing now under the management phase of the health response compared to containment.
An eight-year-old girl, reported to have cerebal palsy, died in Wellington Hospital on Sunday and a 42-year-old Christchurch man, with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, died last Thursday. No government ministers would get it either.
The Christchurch man had been suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, his family says.
The Christchurch man had been suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, his family says.
The family said they were very private and would not be commenting further.
The man was 42-years-old and died at home. Waikato chief coroner Neil MacLean said it was strongly probable that swine flu was a factor in his death.
Zachary Wilson, 19, died in his Hamilton home last Sunday without being tested for swine flu.
The announcement sparked a bombardment of calls to Healthline which jumped 40 percent after the deaths were reported on the six o’clock news on Saturday. He was an asthmatic and reportedly also smoked.
The ministry said that many calls that nurses were answering where multiple household members were sick, meaning the calls were taking longer than usual. .