About an H1N1 vaccination e-mail hoax












UNMC H1N1 site



Faculty, staff and students can stay informed about campus happenings related to the H1N1 flu through UNMC’s H1N1 Web site.

The Web site features:

  • News and updates;
  • Videos and soundbites;
  • Links to such local and federal resources as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Nebraska Health and Human Services and the World Health Organization;
  • UNMC’s pandemic flu experts; and
  • The disaster preparation guide for families.




A hoax e-mail has circulated nationally that warns people not to get the H1N1 vaccination.

According the e-mail, physicians at a hospital in the eastern United States told staff not to receive the vaccine because it may induce Guillain-Barre syndrome.

UNMC infectious disease specialist Mark Rupp, M.D., said the e-mail hoax may stem from the fact that after vaccination for the 1976 Swine Flu, there were a number of incidences of Guillain-Barre syndrome, a disorder in which the body’s immune system attacks part of the peripheral nervous system.

“It’s a legitimate question people may ask,” Dr. Rupp said. “But there are obvious differences from vaccine manufacturing then and now.”

Vaccination tests have increased and improved and Good Manufacturing Practice Regulations have been introduced since that time, he said.

The H1N1 flu vaccine, which will be available starting in October, has been shown to be free of contaminants, Dr. Rupp said.

“We can’t necessarily rule out side effects, but the vaccine has been tested, appears to be safe and effective, and there’s been no unusual adverse effects,” he said. “We very strongly support vaccination for the high risk groups it’s indicated for and the general population.”