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To: DvdMom

Not getting any better, is it?

I dread the fall when it returns even stronger to the USA.


252 posted on 07/07/2009 11:52:43 AM PDT by Palladin (Let's help Sarah take back America!)
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To: Palladin

I was hoping with schools out that cases would go down :((


253 posted on 07/07/2009 11:58:12 AM PDT by DvdMom
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To: Palladin

County’s First Swine Flu Death Claims 19-Year-Old Tourist
Tuesday, July 07, 2009 5:19:31 PM

http://www.cfnews13.com/Health/YourHealth/2009/7/7/orange_county_reports_swine_flurelated_death.html?cid=rss

ORLANDO — County health officials today are reporting the first confirmed case of a death in Orange County related to swine flu.

The 19-year-old woman, a tourist and resident of Pennsylvania, died at Florida Hospital. Officials did not disclose the date of death or details of the case citing federal health privacy laws.

Doctors would not pin the cause of death on swine flue because the cause of death has not been determined.

“This is the first death in Orange County related to swine flue,” said Dr. Kevin Sherin of the Orange County Health Department. “Our hearts and prayers go out to her and her family.”

The report of the young woman’s death comes on the heels of an announcement today by the University of Central Florida that 10 case are being treated among students. That numbers could rise to as many as 26.

So far, the county health department has submitted 400 samples to laboratories for testing for the H1N1 virus. A total of 180 of the samples have been confirmed with Swine flue. Of those, 140 were from Orange County residents. The others were visitors.

Sherin said that based on numbers from the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, there could be thousands of swine flu cases in Orange County that won’t make it into statistics.

“The CDC estimates about 1 million cases of swine flue in the U.S. Based on that estimated, Sherin said as many as 1 in 300 people could be infected with the strain of flu.

“This is not a normal flu season to have this many cases this late in the summer. It’s circulating in the community,” he said.


256 posted on 07/07/2009 5:27:54 PM PDT by DvdMom
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To: Palladin

CA:

Swine flu detected in kids at camps

Virus leads to death of 4th victim in county

By Keith Darcé
Union-Tribune Staff Writer
2:00 a.m. July 8, 2009
http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stories/2009/jul/08/swine-flu-detected-kids-camps/?metro&zIndex=128421

Nyeree Bell (right), 9, felt ill while at camp in Julian but said she wasn’t allowed to call family, including her mother, Kenya Bell (left), and sister Ashanti Chadwick. (Howard Lipin / Union-Tribune)

With swine flu showing no sign of taking a summer vacation, the pandemic virus has claimed a fourth victim in the county and is surfacing at children’s camps across the country, including one in Julian.

Outbreaks at 52 camps in 20 states have been reported to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, spokesman Joe Quimby said yesterday. Because the CDC and states don’t require such reporting, the true number of camp outbreaks is likely higher, Quimby said.

“When you congregate children together, you are going to see increased clusters of infections,” said Dr. Wilma Wooten, San Diego County’s public health officer.

At least 27 asthmatic children who attended a pair of American Lung Association camps in Julian and Livermore in Northern California came down with the flu, the organization told parents in a recent letter. Four campers were hospitalized. Two were treated at Rady Children’s Hospital in San Diego, spokesman Carlos Delgado said.

In the past two weeks, 44 children who were taken to Rady Children’s Hospital with flu symptoms tested positive for swine flu, also known as H1N1 influenza A. The tally included two patients who had attended other camps in the county.

With normal strains of seasonal flu in hibernation, nearly all influenza cases now being detected are H1N1, Quimby said.

Swine flu has been mild overall, but it continues to claim victims. Yesterday, San Diego County’s health officials said the disease contributed to the death of a 50-year-old woman on June 29, six days after she was admitted to Paradise Valley Hospital in National City with severe flu symptoms.

The woman, whom the county declined to name, had underlying respiratory and immune-system problems that played a role in her death, Wooten said. She was the fourth swine flu victim in the region.

In general, people with other serious health problems have been hit harder by swine flu. Asthma, diabetes, chronic heart disease and a weakened immune system are some conditions commonly associated with swine flu hospitalizations, the CDC said.

That pattern prompted the Muscular Dystrophy Association to cancel its summer camps nationwide, including one at Camp Cuyamaca in Descanso.

Other camps have delayed opening to guard against the virus, but most have kept their normal schedules. That was the case with Camp Marston in Julian, which hosted about 180 children over six days for the asthma camp that started June 21.

Camp Marston is operated by YMCA of San Diego. For 10 weeks each summer, the site runs camps for various groups of sick youngsters.

Nyeree Bell, 9, of San Diego’s Encanto neighborhood, attended the program sponsored by the American Lung Association. By the second day of camp, she felt ill and threw up twice, said her mother, Kenya Bell.
After being checked by the camp’s doctor, Nyeree said, she was allowed to continue sleeping in a cabin with other girls and participate in regular camp activities. Nyeree said she asked several times to go home but wasn’t permitted to call her parents.

“I didn’t find out she was ill until I picked her up” on June 26, Kenya Bell said. “When I got her home, she had a temperature over 100.” The sickness developed into bronchitis and triggered repeated asthma attacks, forcing Nyeree to take antibiotics and a steroid-based medication, Bell said.

“I thought this would be a good thing for her to experience — going away, meeting new people, having fun doing outdoor things,” Bell said. “She never wants to go to camp again.”

Darin Borgstadter, associate executive director of Camp Marston, said staff members follow CDC and county health guidelines, which include screening campers for illness when they arrive. The standards also call for segregating sick children until their parents can be notified to take them home or until they have been symptom-free for seven days.

“That’s not our practice,” Borgstadter said of Kenya Bell’s description of her daughter’s experience. “I would be surprised if that’s what happened.”

Seven children tested positive for swine flu in the first three weeks of the summer season at Camp Marston, he said.

“Just like running a school, kids get sick” at camp, Borgstadter said. “The camp is sanitized regularly. The beds are wiped down. The kids are required to wash their hands before meals.”

Parents play a critical role in preventing swine flu outbreaks from occurring at camps, Quimby of the CDC said.

“If your children have influenza, they need to stay home,” he said. “Young people are very susceptible to this new flu, and there is no vaccine.”

Union-Tribune
Keith Darcé: (619) 293-1020


263 posted on 07/08/2009 9:41:03 AM PDT by DvdMom
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