Second chance for flu shots in Bowie
County health department holding clinic
Bowie residents unable to make an appointment in time for the city's H1N1 flu clinic on Saturday will have a chance to be vaccinated at a free walk-in clinic being held in the city the same day by the county health department.
The Prince George's County Health Department will hold the vaccination clinic from 9 a.m. to noon at the Christian Community Presbyterian Church, located at 3120 Belair Drive in Bowie, the department announced Wednesday.
The vaccines are available for priority populations only: pregnant women, people ages six through 24, health care and emergency medical services personnel, caregivers of children younger than 6 months, and people ages 25 through 64 who have health conditions associated with higher risk for medical complications from the flu.
Bowie also will conduct a clinic on Saturday. However, within 24 hours of announcing the city's H1N1 clinic on Monday, all of the vaccinations were spoken for, a city spokeswoman said.
The city announced the free H1N1 flu shot clinic on its Web site and via an e-mail alert system at 4 p.m. Monday. By Tuesday, officials had scheduled appointments for all 200 of the vaccinations they expect to have available, said Bowie communications coordinator Una Cooper. The clinic is being held at City Hall.
"We got about 50 calls in about a half hour yesterday afternoon," Cooper said.
Residents rushed to make appointments because the vaccines have not yet been available at most schools in the city, she said.
The Prince George's County Health Department plans to offer vaccinations at all county schools this year but does not have an entire schedule of the vaccinations yet, said spokeswoman Dellia Hawthorne-Williams. As of last week, 4,100 students in 27 elementary schools had received their first dose of the vaccine, with a second dose expected in December, she said.
The only Bowie school to hold a vaccination clinic was Pointer Ridge Elementary School.
"We're getting ready to start setting a schedule for middle and high schools as well," Hawthorne-Williams said.
The city has wanted to hold a clinic for some time, but acquiring the vaccine has taken time due to overall shortages, Cooper said.
If the city is able to get access to more vaccines, officials might organize another clinic at a later date, Cooper said.
E-mail Andrea Noble at anoble@gazette.net.