They don’t give you the address to get some of this vaccine, which ‘they’ say would in the worst case scenario vaccinate only 4 million, but if you start working in public service you might get some. Washington Post reports that it may be possible to stretch the stuff out to cover 33% of the population. Are you one of those free market folks worried about rationing? Fear socialized medicine? Well get ready, then, because it’s nightmare time.
The Editors Blog.
November 30, 2005 2:38 pm
8 Million Doses Against Pandemic Influenza to be Stocked Up
Comments are closed.
About This Blog
A 'Nature Top 50' science blog by the editors, staff and friends of The American Journal of Bioethics. Science writes: "To follow the latest twists in ... science stories with social impact, dive into this Web log"
Latest Tweets
-
RT @Duncande: Bio-community needs to take privacy fears of public seriously. "CA genetic privacy law could put a damper on research" t.co/a6vXImBv Time ago 17 Hours
- RT @CaulfieldTim: RT. Journals and funding agencies fuel hype, not just the press: @ivanoransky paper t.co/FMoCatJG via @CoyneoftheRealm Thx Time ago 17 Hours
- RT @modernbioethics: Rapid DNA sequencing may soon be routine part of each patient's medical record: Rapid DNA sequencing may soon be... t.co/Qh4gBWv8 Time ago 1 Day
- Trained Interpreters Can Help Prevent Medical Errors t.co/wn9gzrAr #bioethics Time ago 2 Days
- RT @amednews: University of Michigan Health Care System’s apology program has saved $2 million a year in litigation costs t.co/c0ljewty Time ago 2 Days
Follow @bioethics_net on twitter.
-
Archives
Popular Topics
AJOB AJOB Neuroscience AJOB Primary Research animals Art Caplan bioethics bioethics.net biotech book review cells children doctors Empirical Research end of life enhancement ethics FDA food genetics genetic testing graduate health healthcare health insurance human IRB journals law medical medical ethics neuroethics neuroscience organ donation pharmaceuticals policy politics public health reproduction reproductive technology research research ethics school stem stem cells Summer Johnson McGee




