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PANDEMIC ALERT LEVEL
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Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk

School Closures (May Cut Infection Rate By 40%)

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Mahshadin View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 30 2009 at 2:02pm

Well here atleast some schools are starting up and most will be up and running with students within the next 2 to 3 weeks. I have visited several of the sites and very little has been done in preperation it seems, or atleast what is being told through communications and website postings.

I did find one school district that is going to be putting in hand sanitizers and implimenting hand washing routines for the lunch time. One other apparently has classroom Pandemic kits (Didnt say what they were), could be anything from gloves to full blown kits.
 
 
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Will Swine Flu Follow Campers To School?

 
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention established priorities this week for who should get vaccinated for swine flu this fall, but the new H1N1 strain hasn't waited for the official start of flu season. The flu has had a major impact this summer on one venerable institution: camp.

Jessica Sass, 9, had a great time at Camp Alonim in Southern California this summer, but she had fewer bunkmates to share in the fun. Six of them — half the cabin — got sent home. They developed fevers and went to the infirmary. Their parents were notified to come and get them.

"We saw these two big luggage things on both sides of the door," Jessica says. "And we all started bursting in tears and stuff. It was sad."

She says the remaining six campers sat on the floor, hoping no one else would get sick and that their friends would return soon.

 
They did come back, but out of 410 children at Camp Alonim's first session, 160 were sent home, suspected of having swine flu. This was despite the camp's best efforts to screen them when they arrived, say Jessica's parents, Deborah and Larry Sass.

"They actually took all of the kids' temperatures and anyone over 99.5 was sent home for seven days regardless of the reason for their fever," Deborah Sass says.

Cases Around The Nation

Swine flu has been an issue for summer camps across the nation. At least 33 overnight camps in Maine have had outbreaks.

The Muscular Dystrophy Association, which runs 80 camps around the country, decided to cancel all sessions in July and August after a few campers in Utah, Minnesota and Pennsylvania came down with the disease. Dr. Valerie Cwik, the medical director of the MDA, says that decision disappointed 2,500 would-be campers and the volunteers who work with them.

"Our campers talk about camp as being the best week of the year, but we had to put the health and safety of the campers and the volunteer community first," she says.

People with muscular dystrophy and similar disorders are especially at risk, Cwik says. "Children with muscular dystrophy and related diseases often have weakness of their respiratory muscles and are prone to the flu and complications from the flu," she says. "You know, what we were learning about the swine flu was that this virus particularly targets lungs, which can lead to pneumonia, which can be catastrophic for children with weakened respiratory systems."

Worries Ahead Of School Year

The camp outbreaks serve as a warning of what schools may face in the fall.

Kimberly Uyeda, director of student medical services at the Los Angeles Unified School District, says the district is beginning to take precautions now.

"We've prepared letters to go out to parents and to staff," Uyeda says. "We're collaborating with county public health to display posters that talk about hand-washing and covering your cough and cough etiquette. That's out of the ordinary for us, but it's in line with what's being recommended."

School district warehouses are also chock-full of waterless hand sanitizer.

It isn't just students who are at risk, Uyeda says. The district is figuring out what to do if teachers and other staffers come down with swine flu.

Hopefully, it won't come to that, but no one knows whether the swine flu will be devastating this fall or just an extension of the usual flu season.

 
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As South Africas numbers double in a matter of days, reports of schools closing.

 
______________________________________________________________________
 

School No 2 closes as swine flu spreads

By Candice Bailey and Kashiefa Ajam

A second Johannesburg private school has closed its doors ahead of the scheduled mid-year break, with three cases of swine flu now reported at Gauteng government schools.

Fleming Pre-Primary in Craighall Park is believed to have closed earlier than normal. This comes as the National Institute for Communicable Diseases announced that there were 480 cases of swine flu in South Africa.

The figure is almost triple the number of cases reported in the last two weeks.

Fleming Pre-Primary principal Lecia Fleming was not available to speak to the Saturday Star. Her husband said she was "not well" and confirmed that the school had closed.

The Gauteng Education Department has not revealed which schools have been affected but urged parents and schools to be vigilant with children who felt ill.

The provincial Rapid Response team on Communicable Diseases will continue to visit schools.

Meanwhile it is still not clear what the local hajj authority's next move will be after Saudi Arabia reported its second swine flu death yesterday.

Arab health officials said an Indonesian woman had died of swine flu, the kingdom's second death in less than a week. It was the Middle East's third death.

Saudi Arabia has reported more than 230 cases of the flu, the most in the Arab world.

Last week, Arab health ministers banned children, the elderly and those with chronic illnesses from attending this year's hajj pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia over swine flu fears.

But the South African Hajj and Umrah Council (Sahuc) said earlier this week that it was in the dark about a reported ban. The annual pilgrimage attracts about three million Muslims to Saudi Arabia.

The council's secretary general, Ibrahim Ismail, said it had not received official notification but that it would consult the consul general in Jeddah to ascertain how South Africans would be affected.

"The ban will have an impact on South African hujajj (pilgrims), particularly people who are over 65 years and people with chronic illnesses."

Ismail added that the ban would have a ripple effect because many elderly pilgrims were accompanied by younger relatives who may decide to withdraw as they would not want to send their older relatives alone at a later stage.

The virus first spiralled out of control during a university- level squash tournament over the June holidays, where 16 cases of swine flu had been reported.

Last week the Saturday Star reported that Morningside private school Redhill High had closed down after its case load had increased from seven to nine cases in one week and that at least 30 students at Jewish day schools King David's College in Victory Park and Linksfield had contracted the flu on a tour to Israel recently.

Redhill became the second to issue a swine flu alert after St Stithians College, which also has two cases.

Earlier this week the Pretoria News also reported that five pupils and one staff member at St Albans College in Pretoria had been diagnosed with the virus, bringing the number of reported cases in Pretoria to 10.

Meanwhile, in the Western Cape a Strand High School pupil has been diagnosed with swine flu after she collapsed at the school and a Stellenbosch school has called off all sporting activities until Monday as a result of "an unusual occurrence" of winter illnesses.

United Herzlia Schools also had two cases of the H1N1 virus.

Simon Lee, spokesman for the Independent School Association in Southern Africa, confirmed that Fleming Pre-Primary had closed.

Initial media reports were that St Katharine's School in Parktown had also closed but yesterday its headmistress Rose Antrobus said that the closure had nothing to do with swine flu.

o    This article was originally published on page 2 of The Star on August 01, 2009

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=125&art_id=vn20090801061710669C965401

 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2009 at 4:55pm

Will Swine Flu Follow Campers To School?

.............................................................

  
To continue along that line...
 
 
...Health officials say flu cases may explode in the fall, when schools open and become germ factories,
 and the new estimates dramatize the need to have vaccines and other measures in place.

...The first vaccines are expected in September and October, Fukuda said.
Other vaccines
won't be ready until well into the flu season when a further dramatic rise in swine flu cases is expected.
 
 
.......................................................................................................

 
So.... open the schools before there is a vaccine   .... the children become infected....
 
after which time,  a vaccine is available.  
 
Would they consider opening the schools      ... after children get vaccinations?

 .... then send them to school...     or is that too logical?

And  ..... it would show us just how well the vaccines work...   hmmm.
 
..................
 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2009 at 6:44pm

Schools gearing up to meet swine flu threat

By Caroline An, Staff Writer
Posted: 08/01/2009 07:07:44 AM PDT

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Thai pupils wear face masks during a visit to the Science Museum in Bangkok on July 14, 2009. ( PORNCHAI KITTIWONGSAKUL/AFP/Getty Images)
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Just weeks away from the start of school, bathrooms are being acid-washed, posters are going up on walls reminding students to wash up, and hand-sanitizers are being deployed by the thousands.

While concern that swine flu could quickly spread among schoolchildren has officials in Britain and other countries seriously considering keeping schools closed this fall, California public schools officials are in preparation mode, state Department of Education spokeswoman Hilary McLean said.

The watchword is cleanliness, she said.

"Districts are required to have a school emergency plan updated and planning their check lists. They should be posting information on the walls on good hygiene and reminding students to wash their hands frequently," she said.

About 10,243 people worldwide have now been infected with confirmed swine flu, Fadela Chaib, a spokeswoman for the World Health Organization, said. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has identified 43,771 cases nationwide since last year. Of those, 302 people have died, 52 of them in California.

One confirmed swine flu case was reported in Pasadena in May.

Laeticia Saenz, public health nursing program manager for the Pasadena Public Health Department, said any student showing up to school with flu-like symptoms should be sent home.

"We have to come to grips with this," Ann Rector, Pasadena Unified School District's coordinator of health programs. "It's already closed a lot of summer camps and it's something we have to be aware of. This isn't going away."

Posters reminding students to wash their hands and cover their mouths when they cough will go up throughout campuses this fall. The district also has purchased extra supplies of hand-sanitizers and face masks, Rector said.

She said she plans to recommend that principals curtail or eliminate any activities that require students to hold hands.

While it now appears that a swine flu vaccine won't be available to schools until at least October, Rector said she and her staff of 24 nurses will meet later this year with city health officials to discuss how it would be administered.

Many districts will send letters home to parents reminding them to practice good hygiene, while others are considering hiring extra nurses to administer the vaccine once it becomes available, local educators said.

Schools aren't starting from scratch this fall. Since the swine flu outbreak occurred last spring, schools have been on alert, receiving regular CDC updates and guidelines. The state education department also posts frequent updates on its Web site.

East Whittier City School District Superintendent Joe Gillentine said his schools are stocking up on hand-sanitizers. And hygiene reminders will be sent home to parents this fall.

"We are talking about it. We want to make sure we do everything we can for kids and families to stay healthy," he said.

Parents in Rowland Unified School District will soon receive "flu prevention notice" letters, officials said. In addition, parents will be notified when more than five students in one class are absent with illness, district spokeswoman Gina Ward said.

Baldwin Park Unified School Disrict has already spent about $60,000 on a year-worth supply of hand-sanitizers for every classroom. In the few weeks, every school bathroom will be acid-washed, Superintendent Mark Skvarna said.

"We are trying not to panic people. Our teachers know they have the hand-sanitizers, and we are keeping things as clean we can," Skvarna said.

 
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."   G Orwell
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 01 2009 at 6:52pm
Originally posted by Mary008 Mary008 wrote:

 

.......................................................................................................

 
So.... open the schools before there is a vaccine   .... the children become infected....
 
after which time,  a vaccine is available.  
 
Would they consider opening the schools      ... after children get vacinations?

 .... then send them to school...     or is that too logical?

And  ..... it would show us just how well the vaccines work...   hmmm.
 
..................
 
 
 
 
Logical and common sense seem to be getting overriden, I am not sure by who or for what reasons but somehow $$$$ must be involved.
 
It seems sometimes we get our values out of wack. To me this is a no brainer. I think someone should invent a (Common Sense Stun Gun), and require anyone in decision making roles to recieve a dose every 4 hours or as directed by a doctor
 
LOL
l
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2009 at 8:32pm
 
Here is a study done in USA on the subject of school and community restrictions and cloings.  A little difficult to read but worth it if you are intereted in this subject and what would or would not make a difference in a Pandemic (Non pharmaceutical) .
 
 
 
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School Dismissal Monitoring System (US)

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U. S. Department of Education have established a School Dismissal Monitoring System to report on novel influenza (H1N1)-related school or school district dismissal in the United States. Your assistance in reporting known school dismissals is very important.

School dismissals can be reported in two ways:

Thank you for your help.  For more school-related influenza information, please go to www.ed.gov or www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu.

 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 03 2009 at 11:25pm
Great info Mahshadin! I went onto the ed site and it seems that there is a possibility that schools and districts may close. If there are lots of sick kids I hope they close.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 4:39pm

Schools Face Fears About Swine Flu Closures

Government to Release Guidelines As Early As Friday to Help Educators Make H1N1 Decisions

By LISA STARK and KATE BARRETT
Aug. 4, 2008
 
Schools are bracing for what could be a nasty flu season -- and for principals and educators, that may mean making tricky decisions about when to close their doors.
Photo:%20Schools%20Open%20Facing%20Fears%20About%20Swine%20Flu%20Closures:%20Government%20To%20Release%20Guidelines%20Friday%20To%20Help%20Educators%20Make%20H1N1%20Decisions
Schools face the challenge of preventing the spread of the deadly swine flu virus and the potential for causing massive disruptions for families and students.
(ABC News Photo Illustration)

The challenge is to balance preventing the spread of the deadly swine flu virus with the potential for causing massive disruptions for families and students.

Watch "World News With Charles Gibson" tonight at 6:30 ET for the full report.

"How do you continue learning for students who are healthy?" asked Cindy Ball, director of community relations for Rockdale County Public Schools in Georgia, where schools are already back in session. "If you have to close the school, how do you continue learning?

"We don't have any magical answers," Ball said.

To help educators face the upcoming season, the government plans to release guidelines as early as Friday to help school districts manage potential closings.

But while federal officials can give advice, they know decisions need to be made locally.

"If we find that we're in a position where we need to close the schools, we'll have that discussion with our local board and our local community, and do what's right for our students," Ball said.

"Schools' nurses in our county have taken an active role along with our county public health department, and we've gone out to provide school-based flu clinics," Sheri Coburn, director of comprehensive health programs at the San Joaquin County Office of Education in California, said today.

Today, John Barry, author of "The Great Influenza," said guidance from the government makes sense.

"Keeping kids at home for days at a time, much less weeks, is almost impossible," he said. "When you add to that the burden imposed on working parents, and getting meals to poor students who depend on school for them, only in extreme circumstances does closing schools make sense."

 
 
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."   G Orwell
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 5:15pm

"Keeping kids at home for days at a time, much less weeks,
is almost impossible," he

said. "When you add to that the burden imposed on working parents, and getting meals to poor

 students who depend on school for them, only in extreme circumstances does closing

schools make sense."

...........................................................


it is NOT impossible, may be necessary.... we ....are talking.... extreme illness  (rather than death)


This highly infective flu really gets around.  It may be mild in some but the part that is

difficult is... how   very long   it takes to recover.  The last time I saw a flu this bad was

back in the winter of 1990-91.  There was fever...and people had trouble with their legs

after....weakness.


Mine here is on day nine and still tired and coughing.  The cough is productive now. No

fever. no gastro/intest..  Just headache and stuffed head first...is seems to stay in the ears

a bit and causes  dizzyness and mild nausea that come and go for days....so that's

where the dramamine  comes in.  Also giving elderberry concentrate and pleurisy root

extract in bottled water for the chest.  On 3rd bottle of B&T Cough and Bronchial syrup.


The stuffy head was so bad... she went outside.   I saw that happen once before when my

mom had a fall  flu.  She took a lawn chair outside and sat in it...she was so ill. I found that

IBUPROFEN is very important along with steam... I put only (2) drops of (Thursdays

Plantation
) tea tree in a steaming bowl of water.  It helps get rid of the ...  'I have to get

out of here' feeling that makes people want to go out of doors.  i find that some people

are so ill they are unable to tell you what is wrong....so I use the anti-inflammatory meds

like Ibuprofen and the steam to break up the congestion that feels to them like a rock.  


Please talk to your Doctor and have all you need and the dosage for your diff. family

members ages all set ahead of time.  Made it easy for us..  I had the elderberry

concentrate..etc..the health store got me the pleurisy root extract right away..I called for it

Wed and they called me Friday late morn to get it. 

So... this may cause people to be out of work ... or to go back to work too early and

become ill again.   I can see it now.  instead of being ill 2 weeks it could go to nearly


3 weeks.out of work...or school. 


............................................................


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 6:23pm
Am I the only one having a problem with this. I have read atleast 4 well done research papers on this and they all say the same thing. Close the schools if you want any hope of slowing and minimizing casualties.
 
Impossible
 
I am an American (There is nothing that is impossible) only what you have convince3d yourself of or allowed others to convince you of. Whats impossible here is having thousand of school districts trying to make these decisions with little to no experience or education in pandemic planning or prepairdeness. Someone needs to step up to the plate and take charge here. Perhaps a panel of virolgy scientists and doctors making the call.
 
We need to speak out on behalf of our children, they are obviously being sacrificed for no good reason/s. The most affected group by this virus both in infections and fatalities are going to be sent to obvious viral breeding grounds (Proven) for what?
 
We might inconvenience some employers
Education delayed for a month
Poor children wont get fed 
 
(I will volunteer to drop off some meals myself) the other 2 I can live with
 
I would suggest you all get into contact with your local school district, school administrators, and PTA representatives to see exactly what kind of understanding they have of what is possibly coming are way in a few weeks. since these people will be the ones making the decisions it would be a good idea to get a feeling of just what kind of mentality your dealing with as it relates to your own children and their safety.
 
Write a letter to your local school board
Write a letter to the school your children are attending (Ask for specific Pandemic Response Information)
Write a letter to your state representatives
Write a letter to your House representatives
Write a letter to your congressman
 
Are children should not be put into a forced game of viral russian roulette because the science is being ignored.
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."   G Orwell
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote MelodyAtHome Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 7:01pm
Mahshadin, I totaly agree with you. This is russina roulette. How doe they expect schools with no experience in this to make decisions.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 7:02pm
good idea. Makes no dff... if you are red or blue... write to them all.... as they're the

...Congress... the ones who make the laws and changes we ask for...ask........fill in your zip code.



http://www.congress.org/congressorg/officials/congress




...................................................


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SheepLady Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 7:26pm
Way to go Mashadin!!!!!!ClapClapClapClapClap
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SheepLady Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 7:28pm
Sorry, misspelled your name, Mahshadiin, got it now!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Guests Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 8:52pm
Let me tell you how Colorado School Districts are and have handled the H1N1 situation. We have a Head Nurse in each schoold district who takes direction from the State Health Department Epidemiologist Doctor. So if the State Health Dept gets reports of H1N1 in a school from the district nurse it is discussed and decided if to close the school.

How do I know this...I talked directly with the State Health Department Epidemiologist Doctor last spring when this hit.

I believe the same thing will happen if the whole District is ill.

So there are plans let's just hope the plans work and saves lives.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 9:09pm
FluMom
 
Was that before or after the CDC did a flip flop on the subject in the spring of this year? Most State ED boards were executing based on their reccomendations.
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."   G Orwell
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 04 2009 at 9:36pm
Here is the latest here in the Desert from Officials  where the school year is just getting underway
_______________________________________________

New wave of Swine Flu could be approaching

by Bob McClay/KTAR (August 4th, 2009 @ 5:27pm)

 PHOENIX - Maricopa County health officials fear there may be more Swine Flu cases now that school is back in session.

They're afraid children who have the virus may spread it to their classmates. Doctor Bob England says most people who get the flu don't need to rush to the doctor.

"You'll be fine," said England. "Just rest [and] drink fluids. The usual advice, and please, please, please don't go to work. And don't send your sick kids to school."

He also says the second wave of the Swine Flu cases could start this month.

"We could see our second wave of the pandemic, which we've known was going to come at some point, we might see it get rolling here in August."

There have been over 760 confirmed cases of the Swine Flu in Arizona. England says most cases don't get reported, so the actual number could be in the tens of thousands.

 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 05 2009 at 3:15pm
 
Parents need to keep a close eye out... child isn't talking... or moving much...
 
skin color is different... I use steam with vicks...ask Doc on use....  I also did the patting on
 
each side  back (not on spine) ... older teens can do front themselves....  or, my parents
 
use the swedish hand held massage on front and back to break up mucus.  
 
Steam is very important.     Ask your Doctor now...  what to do if child has trouble
 
breathing?     911
 
August... well. many are ill now.  We knew it would be way too disruptive to close schools across the board.  Some will close here and there.  our economy is 70%/ percent consumer driven?  we need those back to school bucks.  even I take advantage of the sales. :/
 
 
H2N2 influenza in 1957... must have been highly infective also.
 
 
 
Some measures won't help prevent flu pandemic: report
 
 
REUTERS
excerpt-

...Closing schools, stopping large gatherings and other such measures are unlikely to do much to prevent the spread of the H1N1 swine flu pandemic, a team of experts predicted on Wednesday.

They said pandemic closely resembles the pandemic of H2N2 influenza in 1957 when it quickly became apparent that there was little officials could do to stop it.
 
 
article in full here-
 
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Questions and Answers about CDC Guidance for State and Local Public Health Officials and School Administrators for School (K-12) Responses to Influenza during the 2009-2010 School Year

August 7, 2009 9:00 AM ET

How does CDC�s new flu guidance for schools differ from the previous school guidance documents?
The new guidance applies to any flu virus circulating during the 2009-2010 school year, not only 2009 H1N1 flu. The new guidance recognizes the need to balance the risks of illness among students and staff with the benefits of keeping students in school. It offers specific steps for school staff, parents, and students to take given the current flu conditions as well as for more severe flu conditions. The new guidance also provides information for making decisions at the community level about when to use these strategies aimed at schools.

In addition, this guidance recommends that, based on current flu conditions, students and staff with flu-like illness stay home until at least 24 hours after they no longer have a fever or signs of a fever. This should be determined without the use of fever-reducing medications (any medicine that contains ibuprofen or acetaminophen). This is a shorter time period from the previous guidance which recommended that sick students and staff stay home 7 days after symptoms begin. The 7 day period away from school for sick students and staff would still be recommended under more severe flu conditions.  In addition, this longer period should be used in healthcare settings and in any place where a high number of high-risk people may be exposed, such as childcare facilities for children younger than 5 years of age.

Why should we be concerned about the spread of flu in schools?
Students can get sick with flu and schools may act as a point of spread, where students can easily spread flu to other students and their families. So far, with 2009 H1N1 flu, the largest number of cases has been in people between the ages of 5 and 24-years-old.

Which students and staff are at higher risk for complications from flu?
Anyone can get the flu (even healthy people), and serious problems from the flu can happen at any age. However, children under the age of 5 years, pregnant women, people of any age with chronic medical conditions (such as pulmonary disease, including asthma, diabetes, neuromuscular disorders or heart disease), and people age 65 years and older are more likely to get complications from the flu.

How will schools and communities decide what steps to take?
CDC and other public health agencies will be monitoring national data on the number of people who seek care for flu-like illness, as well as the number of hospitalizations and deaths. CDC will also look at the geographic spread of flu-like illness and will look for changes in the characteristics of the virus. By comparing data on a weekly basis with seasonal flu trends and trends from the 2009 H1N1 flu during the spring, CDC will be able to provide advice to state and local agencies on appropriate steps to take. States and local communities can expect the impact of flu in their communities to be different from that seen in other parts of the country. States, communities, and schools should consider:

  • who needs to be involved in the decision-making process and include those people in regular communications,
  • the severity of flu and the impact in the community and in the schools, and
  • the goals, feasibility, and community�s acceptability of the action steps being considered.

What can families, students, and school personnel do to keep from getting sick and spreading flu?
Families, students, and school staff can keep from getting sick with flu in three ways:

  • Practicing good hand hygiene. Students and staff members should wash their hands often with soap and water, especially after coughing or sneezing. Alcohol-based hand cleaners are also effective.
  • Practicing respiratory etiquette.  The main way that the flu spreads is from person to person in the droplets produced by coughs and sneezes, so it�s important to cover your mouth and nose with a tissue when you cough or sneeze.  If you don�t have a tissue, cough or sneeze into your elbow or shoulder, not into your hands.
  • Staying home if you�re sick. Keeping sick students at home means that they keep their viruses to themselves rather than sharing them with others.

Students, staff, and their families must take personal responsibility for helping to slow the spread of the virus by practicing these steps to keep from getting sick with flu and protecting others from getting the flu.

What is the best way to practice good hand hygiene?

  • Washing your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds (the time it takes to sing �Happy Birthday� twice) is the best way to keep your hands from spreading the virus.
  • Alcohol-based hand cleaners containing at least 60% alcohol are also effective.
  • If soap and water are not available and alcohol-based products are not allowed in the school, other hand sanitizers that do not contain alcohol may be useful for cleaning hands.  However, they may not be as effective as alcohol-based sanitizers.

What steps can schools take to keep students and staff from getting sick?
Schools should take the following steps to help keep students and staff from getting sick with flu. These steps should be followed ALL the time, and not only during a flu pandemic.

  • Encourage respiratory etiquette by providing staff and students
    • education and reminders about covering coughs and sneezes, and
    • easy access to tissues and running water and soap or alcohol-based hand cleaners.
  • Remind staff and students to practice good hand hygiene and provide the time and supplies for students and staff to wash their hands when needed.
  • Send sick students and staff home. Advise students, staff, and families that sick people should stay at home until at least 24 hours after they no longer have a fever or signs of a fever. This should be determined without the use of fever-reducing medicines (any medicine that contains ibuprofen or acetaminophen). They should stay home until at least 24 hours after they no longer have a fever even if they are using antiviral medicines.  Schools should revise their policies and incentives to avoid unknowingly penalizing students who stay home when they are sick (e.g., perfect attendance awards).
  • Clean surfaces and items that are more likely to have frequent hand contact with cleaning agents that are usually used in these areas. Additional disinfection beyond routine cleaning is not recommended. Some states and localities have laws about specific cleaning products used in schools.  School officials should contact their state health department and department of environmental protection for additional guidance.
  • Move students and staff who become sick at school to a separate room until they can be sent home. Limit the number of staff who take care of the sick person and provide a surgical mask for the sick person to wear if they can tolerate it.
  • Have Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) such as masks available and ensure it is worn by school nurses and other staff caring for sick people at school.
  • Encourage sick students and staff at higher risk of complications from flu to get a medical evaluation as soon as possible. Taking antiviral medicines early might prevent severe complications from the flu, such as hospitalization or death.
  • Consider dismissing students if a large proportion of staff are at higher risk of flu-related complications.  This strategy would be applicable to very few schools nationwide.  Settings where this strategy might be appropriate are in schools for pregnant women and schools with many medically fragile children.

What should I do if I�m pregnant and I work or attend a K-12 school?
Pregnant women working in or attending schools should follow the same guidance as the general public about staying home when sick, hand hygiene, respiratory etiquette, and routine cleaning.  Pregnant women are at higher risk of complications from flu and should speak with their doctor as soon as possible if they develop a flu-like illness to find out whether they should take antiviral flu medicines. Any person at high risk for flu complications should do the same. Early treatment with antiviral flu medicines is recommended for pregnant women who have the flu. Pregnant women and their doctors should know that they are part of the first priority group to receive the 2009 H1N1 flu vaccine.

What are fever-reducing medications and when would I stop giving them to my child?
Fever-reducing medications are medicines that contain acetaminophen (such as Tylenol) or ibuprofen (such as Motrin). These medicines can be given to people who are sick with flu to help bring their fever down and relieve their pain. Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) should not be given to children or teenagers who have flu; this can cause a rare but serious illness called Reye�s syndrome.

A sick student can return to school after 24 hours have passed with a normal temperature (98.6 degrees Fahrenheit or 37 degrees Celsius) without the use of fever-reducing medications. As the sick person begins to feel better you may decide to stop giving fever-reducing medicines. Continue to monitor their temperature until the temperature has been normal for 24 hours.

Can the virus live on surfaces, such as computer keyboards?

  • Yes, flu viruses may be spread when a person touches droplets left by coughs and sneezes on hard surfaces (such as desks or door knobs) or objects (such as keyboards or pens) and then touches his or her mouth or nose. However, it is not necessary to disinfect these surfaces beyond routine cleaning.
  • Clean surfaces and items that are more likely to have frequent hand contact with cleaning agents that are usually used in these areas. Some states and localities have laws about specific cleaning products used in schools.  School officials should contact their state health department and department of environmental protection for additional guidance.

How do I recognize a fever or signs of a fever?
A fever is a temperature taken with a thermometer that is equal to or greater than 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius). If you are not able to measure a temperature, the sick person might have a fever if he or she

  • feels warm,
  • has a flushed appearance, or
  • is sweating or shivering.

How long should a sick student or staff member be kept home?
In the current flu conditions, students and staff with symptoms of flu should stay home for at least 24 hours after they no longer have fever or do not feel feverish, without using fever-reducing drugs.  If the flu conditions become more severe, CDC recommends that a sick person stay home for 7 days. A person who is still sick after 7 days should stay home until 24 hours after the symptoms have gone away.  In addition, this longer period should be used in healthcare settings and in any place where a high number of high-risk people may be exposed, such as childcare facilities for children less than 5 years of age.

Sick people should stay at home, except to go to the doctor�s office, and should avoid contact with others. Keeping people with a fever at home may reduce the number of people who get infected. Because high temperatures are linked with higher amounts of virus, people with a fever may be more contagious.

Should family members of sick students stay home too?
Not unless the flu conditions are determined to be more severe. If flu conditions are more severe, school-aged children should also stay home for 5 days from the time someone in their home became sick. It is possible that family members could already be sick with flu and not be showing symptoms yet. The 5-day period provides enough time to know if anyone else is sick with flu. Parents should continue to monitor their health and the health of the sick child, as well as the health of their other children.

What additional steps should schools and families take to keep students and staff from getting sick in the event that the flu is more severe?
In addition to the steps that schools should be taking all the time, if flu conditions become more severe, schools and families should consider adding the following steps.

  • Extend the time sick students or staff stay home to at least 7 days, even if they feel better sooner. People who are still sick after 7 days should continue to stay home until at least 24 hours after symptoms have gone away.
  • Schools should allow high risk students and staff to stay home.  These students and staff should make this decision in consultation with their doctor.
  • Schools should conduct active symptom screening of students and staff upon arrival at school. Any sick students or staff should be separated from others, offered a surgical mask, and sent home.
  • If a household member is sick, parents should keep any school-aged children home for 5 days from the time the first person in the home became sick. Parents should monitor the health of their other children for fever and other symptoms of the flu.
  • Schools should find ways to increase social distances (the space between people) at school if possible.
  • Schools should work closely with their county and state public health officials to decide how and when to dismiss students. If the decision is made to dismiss students, schools should notify public health and education agencies by submitting a report about the dismissal. Students should be dismissed for 5 to 7 days and near the end of this period, communities should reassess to determine if students can return to school.

What can schools do to increase social distance during a more severe flu outbreak?
School officials should think creatively about ways to increase the space between people, but still keep students in school. Not everything will be feasible for all communities, but it is important to consider some options for social distancing if schools are going to remain open. Some options are?

  • rotating teachers between classrooms while keeping the same group of students in one classroom,
  • canceling classes that bring students together from multiple classrooms,
  • holding classes outdoors,
  • postponing class trips,
  • discouraging use of school buses and public transit,
  • dividing classes into smaller groups,
  • moving desks farther apart, and
  • moving classes to larger spaces to allow more space between students.

What is the difference between a school dismissal and school closure?
A school closure means closing the school and sending all the students and staff home. In a school dismissal, the school may stay open for staff while the children stay home.

Keeping school facilities open allows teachers to develop and deliver lessons and materials and other staff to continue to provide important services.

What are the different types of school dismissals?
There are three types of school dismissals:

  • Selective dismissal is used when all or most students in the school are at higher risk for complications once infected with flu. For example, a school for medically fragile children or for pregnant students may decide to close based on the local situation while other schools in the community may remain open.
  • Reactive dismissal is used when many students and staff are sick and are not attending school, or many students and staff are arriving at school sick and are being sent home.
  • Preemptive dismissal is used early during a flu response in a community to decrease the spread of the flu before many students and staff get sick. This is based on information about the spread of severe flu in the region. This dismissal is most effective at decreasing flu spread and burden on the healthcare system when done early in relation to the amount of flu activity in the area.

No matter what type of school dismissal is chosen, all school-related mass gatherings should be canceled or postponed in order to decrease the spread of flu among students, their families and staff. This includes sporting events, school dances, performances, rallies, commencement ceremonies, and other events that bring large groups of people into close contact with one another.

What is a medically fragile child?
For this guidance, a medically fragile child is a child who needs intensive, life sustaining medical assistance or therapy, and needs assistance with daily living (for example, a child who uses an oxygen tank, has trouble moving, is fed through a tube, needs suctioning, or is on a ventilator).  Many of these children need skilled nursing care and special medical equipment.  These medically fragile children may have chronic lung disease, severe cerebral palsy, muscular dystrophy, immunodeficiency, or problems with their metabolism.

How will the decision be made to dismiss schools?
The decision to dismiss students will be made at the community level. School officials should work closely with their local and state public health and government officials to make sound decisions, based on local conditions. The decision should consider

  • the number and severity of cases in an outbreak (looking at national, regional, and local data),
  • the risks of flu spread and benefits of dismissal,
  • the problems that school dismissal can cause for families and communities, and
  • different types of dismissal (selective, reactive, and preemptive).

CDC may recommend preemptive dismissals based on information that the outbreak is becoming more severe.  An increase in flu spread without an impact on disease outcomes will not lead to the use of preemptive dismissals in most cases.

How will communities know if the flu is more severe and that they need to consider taking additional action steps?
CDC and other public health agencies will be monitoring national data on the number of people who seek care for flu-like illness, as well as the number of hospitalizations and deaths. CDC will also look at the geographic spread of flu-like illness and will look for changes in the virus.  In addition, CDC will compare data on a weekly basis with seasonal flu trends from other years and with data collected during the spring 2009 outbreak. State and local health departments will also be on the lookout for increases in severe illness in their areas.

How long will schools have to stay dismissed?
The length of time school should be dismissed will vary depending on how severe the flu is and how many people are sick. When the decision is made to dismiss students, CDC recommends doing so for 5-7 calendar days. Near the end of this period, communities should reassess the severity and impact of the flu, the benefits of keeping students home, and the consequences of doing so.  Based on this reassessment, communities can decide whether to extend the school dismissal for another week or to reopen the school.  However, if a flu outbreak is determined to be severe, a longer time period may be recommended.

Why would one school dismiss students and another school continue to remain open?
School action steps should vary based on the severity of the pandemic and the impact it is having in the school. Decisions for school dismissal will be made at the community level, based on the number and severity of cases in the school and community. Because the impact of flu on a community will differ from location to location, the steps that are taken will also be different.

Also, certain schools may have a large number of students who are at high risk for complications from the flu (such as a school for pregnant teens). These schools may decide to close based on the local situation while other schools in the community remain open. 

What can a parent do to prepare for flu during the 2009-2010 school year?

  • Plan for child care at home if your child gets sick or their school is dismissed (for a minimum of 5 school days).
  • Plan to monitor the health of the sick child and any other children by checking for fever and other symptoms of flu.
  • Update emergency contact lists.
  • Identify a separate room in the house for care of sick family members. Consider designating a single person as the main caregiver for anyone who gets sick.
  • Pull together games, books, DVDs and other items to keep your family entertained while at home.
  • Talk to your school about their flu pandemic or emergency plan.
  • Get your family vaccinated for seasonal flu and 2009 H1N1 flu when vaccines are available.

What can a school do to prepare for flu response during the 2009-2010 school year?

  • Review and revise existing pandemic plans and focus on protecting high risk students and staff.
  • Update student and staff contact information as well as emergency contact lists.
  • Identify and establish a point of contact with the local public health agency.
  • Develop a plan to cover key positions, such as the school nurse, when staff stay home because they are sick.
  • Set up a separate room (a sick room) for care of sick students or staff until they can be sent home.
  • Purchase Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) such as masks for nurses and other staff providing care for sick people at school. Provide training for this staff about basic infection control and the use of PPE.
  • Develop an education campaign to encourage hand hygiene and respiratory etiquette.
  • Develop communication tools (e.g., letters to parents) that can be used to send sick students home, dismiss students, help families identify students who are at high-risk of complications from flu, help staff members self-identify who is at high risk of complications from flu, or cancel mass gatherings. Remind parents and staff how long sick students and staff should remain at home.
  • Identify ways to increase social distance (the space between people).
  • Review school policies and awards to encourage social distancing and avoiding any incentives for people or staff to go to school when they are sick (e.g., cancel perfect attendance awards).
  • Develop a school dismissal plan and options for how school work can be continued at home (e.g., homework packets, web-based lessons, phone calls), if school is dismissed or students are sent home when sick. Communicate this plan to all community members who would be affected.
  • Collaborate with the local health department, community organizations, local businesses, and social services on a plan for response.
  • Help families and communities understand the important roles they can play in reducing the spread of flu in schools.

What can local businesses do to help families and schools during a flu response?
Local business support is essential. If employees are not able to stay home when a child is sick without losing pay or losing their job, it will be even more difficult for families and schools to follow these school-based public health steps and ensure appropriate care for their children at home.  Businesses and employers should offer flexible leave policies that support public health steps to decrease the spread of flu.  Employers should explore telework alternatives when possible given the nature of the business.  Telework refers to activity of working away from the usual workplace (often at home) through telecommunications or other remote access means (e.g., computer, telephone).

What can community- and faith-based organizations do to help families and schools during a flu response?
Community-based and faith-based service organizations can help teach their members about how to stay healthy. They also can offer support to families by providing meals, transportation, and other services to make it easier to stay home if a family member is sick or school is dismissed.

How does CDC�s Guidance for School Response apply to my child at boarding school?
This guidance only applies to nonresidential K-12 schools. If you would like to learn more about what to do if your child lives away at school, please see CDC�s Guidance on Day and Residential Camps. More information about residential students is available in the Guidance for Institutions of Higher Education. Continue to monitor CDC�s website for information about flu. CDC will continue to update the website and guidance recommendations as more is learned about the 2009 H1N1 influenza or flu conditions change.

How does CDC�s Guidance for School Response apply to my child at college?
This guidance only applies to K-12 schools.  If you would like to learn more about what to do if your child is in a college or university, please visit the Guidance for Institutions of Higher Education. Continue to monitor CDC�s website for information about flu. CDC will continue to update the website and guidance recommendations as more is learned about the 2009 H1N1 influenza or flu conditions change.

 
 
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Technical Report for State and Local Public Health Officials and School Administrators on CDC Guidance for School (K-12) Responses to Influenza during the 2009-2010 School Year

August 7, 2009, 9:00 AM ET

CDC is releasing new guidance to help decrease the spread of flu among students and school staff during the 2009-2010 school year. The guidance expands upon earlier school guidance documents by providing a menu of tools that school and health officials can choose from based on conditions in their area. It recommends actions to take this school year, suggests strategies to consider if CDC finds that the flu starts causing more severe disease than during the spring 2009 outbreak, and provides a checklist for making decisions at the local level. Based on the severity of 2009 H1N1 flu-related illness thus far, this guidance also recommends that students and staff with influenza-like illness remain home until 24 hours after resolution of fever without the use of fever-reducing medications. For the purpose of this document, “schools” will refer to both public and private institutions providing grades K-12 education to children and adolescents in group settings. The guidance applies to such schools in their entirety, even if they provide services for younger or older students. Guidance for child care settings and institutions of higher education will be addressed in separate documents.

This Technical Report includes detailed information on the reasons for the strategies presented in the CDC Guidance for School (K-12) Responses to Influenza During the 2009-2010 School Year and suggestions on how to use them. The guidance is designed to decrease exposure to regular seasonal flu and 2009 H1N1 flu while limiting the disruption of day-to-day activities and the vital learning that goes on in schools. CDC will continue to monitor the situation and update the current guidance as more information is obtained on 2009 H1N1.

About 55 million students and 7 million staff attend the more than 130,000 public and private schools in the United States each day. By implementing these recommendations, schools and health officials can help protect one-fifth of the country’s population from flu. In addition to their central mission of educating children and adolescents, schools meet other basic needs: feeding students and providing needed child care, health and mental health services, and safe and stable routines. It is crucial not to interrupt the learning process without due cause. Although illness may be such a cause, schools and their communities have a responsibility to balance the risks of illness among students and staff with the benefits of keeping students in school.

The decision to dismiss students should be made locally and should balance the goal of reducing the number of people who become seriously ill or die from influenza with the goal of minimizing social disruption and safety risks to children sometimes associated with school dismissal. Based on the experience and knowledge gained in jurisdictions that had large outbreaks in spring 2009, the potential benefits of preemptively dismissing students from school are often outweighed by negative consequences, including students being left home alone, health workers missing shifts when they must stay home with their children, students missing meals, and interruption of students’ education. Still, although the situation in fall 2009 is unpredictable, more communities may be affected, reflecting wider transmission.  The overall impact of 2009 H1N1 should be greater than in the spring, and school dismissals may be warranted, depending on the disease burden and other conditions.

CDC is continually monitoring the spread of flu, the severity of the illness it is causing (including hospitalizations and deaths), and whether the virus is changing; CDC will provide periodic updates of these assessments. If this information indicates that flu is causing more severe disease than during the spring 2009 outbreak, or if other developments might require more aggressive mitigation measures, CDC might recommend preemptive, or early, school dismissals.

Recommended school responses to influenza for the 2009–2010 school year

Basic foundations of infection control in school settings should always be promoted and facilitated, not only during an influenza pandemic. During flu season, schools should be particularly vigilant about keeping sick students and staff home. Schools should be proactive, develop contingency plans to cover key positions (for example, school nurses) when staff are home ill, and regularly remind parents and staff of the exclusion recommendations. Plans should focus on protecting people at high risk for influenza complications as these groups are frequently found in schools. For example, asthma alone affects nearly one in ten school-aged youth.  For a list of groups at high risk for influenza complications, see Novel H1N1 Flu and You.

For general guidance on infection control in schools, see the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Managing Infectious Diseases in Child Care and Schools: A Quick Reference Guide, 2nd Edition External%20Web%20Site%20Icon.(2009).

Recommended responses under conditions with similar severity as in spring 2009

Stay home when sick

CDC recommends that individuals with influenza-like illness remain at home until at least 24 hours after they are free of fever (100° F [37.8° C] or greater), or signs of a fever, without the use of fever-reducing medications.

This recommendation is based on epidemiologic data about the overall risk of severe illness and death and attempts to balance the risks of severe illness from influenza and the potential benefits of decreasing transmission through the exclusion of ill persons with the goal of minimizing social disruption.

Decisions about extending the exclusion period should be made at the community level, in conjunction with local and state health officials. More stringent guidelines and longer periods of exclusion – for example, until complete resolution of symptoms – may be considered for people returning to settings where high numbers of high-risk people may be exposed.

Epidemiologic data collected during spring 2009 found that most people with 2009 H1N1 flu who were not hospitalized had a fever that lasted 2 to 4 days; this would require an exclusion period of 3 to 5 days in most cases. Those with more severe illness are likely to have fever for longer periods of time. Although fever is a component of the case definition of influenza-like illness, the epidemiologic data collected during spring 2009 found that a minority of patients infected with 2009 H1N1 flu with respiratory symptoms did not have a fever.

Sick individuals should stay at home until the end of the exclusion period, to the extent possible, except when necessary to seek required medical care. Sick individuals should avoid contact with others. Keeping people with a fever at home may reduce the number of people who get infected since elevated temperature is associated with increased shedding of influenza virus. CDC recommends this exclusion period whether or not antiviral medications are used. People on antiviral treatment may shed influenza viruses that are resistant to antiviral medications.

Many people with influenza illness will continue shedding influenza virus 24 hours after their fevers go away, but at lower levels than during their fever. Shedding of influenza virus, as detected in laboratory tests, can be detected for 10 days or more in some cases. Therefore, when people who have had influenza-like illness return to school they should continue to practice good respiratory etiquette and hand hygiene when they return to school and avoid close contact with people they know to be at increased risk of influenza-related complications.

Because some people may shed influenza virus before they feel ill, and because some people with influenza will not have a fever, it is important that all people cover their cough and wash hands often. To lessen the chance of spreading influenza viruses that are resistant to antiviral medications, adherence to good respiratory etiquette and hand hygiene is as important for people taking antiviral medications as it is for others.

Fever-reducing medications, that is, medications containing acetaminophen or ibuprofen, are appropriate for use in individuals with influenza-like illness. Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) should not be given to children or teenagers who have influenza; this can cause a rare but serious illness called Reye’s syndrome. The determination of readiness to return to school should be made when at least 24 hours have passed since the ill person’s temperature first remained normal without the use of these medications.

For more information on caring for sick persons in the home, see Taking Care of a Sick Person in Your Home.

Separate ill students and staff

Sick students and staff should always be required to stay home. CDC recommends that students and staff who appear to have an influenza-like illness at arrival or become ill during the day be promptly separated from other students and staff and sent home. Schools should regularly update contact information for parents so that they can be contacted more easily if they need to pick up their ill child. Recognizing that space is often in short supply, early planning on the location for a sick room is essential. This room should not be one commonly used for other purposes for example, the lunchroom during non-meal times. Nor should it be a space through which others regularly pass. It is not necessary for this room to have a separate air supply (HVAC) system. Ill persons should be placed in well ventilated areas and placed in areas where at least 6 feet of distance can be maintained between the ill person and others.

A limited number of staff should be designated to care for ill persons until they can be sent home. When possible, these should be people with limited interactions with other students and staff and therefore decreased risk of spreading influenza. These persons should not be at increased risk of influenza complications (for example, pregnant women) and they should be familiar with infection control recommendations to prevent spread of influenza. When possible and if the sick person can tolerate it, he or she should wear a surgical mask when near other persons.

School nurses, and other staff who act in this capacity, are likely to come into close contact with students and staff with influenza-like illness. CDC recommends that staff who provide care for persons with known, probable or suspected influenza or influenza-like illness use appropriate personal protective equipment.

For more information on caring for sick persons in the home, see Taking Care of a Sick Person in Your Home.

See Interim Recommendations for Facemask and Respirator Use to Reduce Novel Influenza A (H1N1) Virus Transmission or www.flu.gov External%20Web%20Site%20Icon.for more information on personal protective equipment and how to recommend it to employees.

Hand hygiene

Influenza may spread via contaminated hands or inanimate objects that become contaminated with influenza viruses. CDC recommends that students and staff be encouraged to wash their hands often with soap and water, especially after coughing or sneezing. Alcohol-based hand cleaners are also effective at killing flu germs, but may not be allowed in all schools. If soap and water are not available, and alcohol-based products are not allowed in the school, other hand sanitizers that do not contain alcohol may be useful however, there is less evidence on their effectiveness compared to that on hand washing and alcohol-based sanitizers.

Schools should provide the time needed for all students and staff to wash their hands whenever necessary, especially after coughing or sneezing into hands, before eating, and after using the restroom. Soap, paper towels and sanitizers are critical for proper hand hygiene and should be readily available in schools. If it is necessary to provide supervision to students as they wash hands in rest rooms, schools should consider timing and staffing as they plan for the fall. Schools also should educate families, students and staff about the importance of good hand hygiene and proper methods for cleaning hands.

Visit Clean Hands Save Lives for more information on hand hygiene.

Respiratory etiquette

Influenza viruses are thought to spread mainly from person to person in respiratory droplets of coughs and sneezes. This can happen when droplets from a cough or sneeze of an infected person are propelled through the air and deposited on the mouth or nose or are inhaled by people nearby. CDC recommends covering the nose and mouth with a tissue when coughing or sneezing and throwing the tissue in the trash after use. Wash hands promptly after coughing or sneezing. If a tissue is not immediately available, coughing or sneezing into one’s arm or sleeve (not into one’s hand) is recommended. To encourage respiratory etiquette, students and staff should have access to tissues and must be educated about the importance of respiratory etiquette, including keeping hands away from the face.

Visit Cover Your Cough for more information on respiratory etiquette.

Routine cleaning

The American Academy of Pediatrics provides guidance for school cleaning and sanitizing which is appropriate for influenza. Schools should regularly clean all areas and items that are more likely to have frequent hand contact (for example, keyboards or desks) and also clean these areas immediately when visibly soiled. Use the cleaning agents that are usually used in these areas.

Some states and localities have laws and regulations mandating specific cleaning products be used in schools.  School officials should contact their state health department or department of environmental protection for additional guidance. Schools should ensure that custodial staff and others (such as classroom teachers) who use cleaners or disinfectants read and understand all instruction labels and understand safe and appropriate use. Instructional materials and training should be provided in languages other than English as locally appropriateCDC does not believe any additional disinfection of environmental surfaces beyond the recommended routine cleaning is required.

See the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Managing Infectious Diseases in Child Care and Schools: A Quick Reference Guide, 2nd Edition (2009)External%20Web%20Site%20Icon. for guidance on cleaning and sanitizing in schools.

The EPA provides a list of EPA-registered products effective against flu.External%20Web%20Site%20Icon.

Early treatment for high-risk students and staff

People at high risk for influenza complications who become ill with influenza-like illness should speak with their health care provider as soon as possible.  Early treatment with antiviral medications is very important for people at high risk because it can prevent hospitalizations and deaths. CDC recommends that schools encourage ill staff and parents of ill students at higher risk of complications from influenza to seek early treatment.

High-risk students and staff who have had close contact with others who are sick with an influenza-like illness should contact their health care provider to discuss whether they may need to take influenza antiviral medications that require a prescription in the U.S.

People on antiviral treatment may still shed influenza viruses and therefore may still transmit the virus to others. These influenza viruses may develop resistance to antiviral medications. To lessen the chance of spreading influenza viruses that are resistant to antiviral medications, adherence to good respiratory etiquette and hand hygiene is as important for people taking antiviral medications as it is for others.

For more information on antiviral medications, see Interim Guidance on Antiviral Recommendations for Patients with Novel Influenza A (H1N1) Virus Infection and Their Close Contacts.

Selective school dismissals

Selective school dismissals may be considered based on the population of an individual school. Although there are not many schools where all or most students are at high risk (for example, a school for medically fragile children or for pregnant students) a community might decide to dismiss such a school to better protect these high-risk children. The decision to selectively dismiss a school should be made locally and should balance the risks of keeping the students in school with the social disruption that school dismissal can cause. School officials should work closely and directly with their local and state public health officials when deciding whether or not to selectively dismiss a school or schools. Selective school dismissals are not likely to have a significant effect on community-wide transmission: Instead, this strategy aims to protect students and staff at high risk of severe illness and death. Information on reactive and preemptive school dismissals is provided in the next section.

Recommended additional responses during times of increased influenza severity

CDC will continue to assess the severity of illness caused by 2009 H1N1 flu and disseminate the results of these ongoing assessments. If global or national risk assessments indicate an increased level of severity compared with the spring 2009 H1N1 flu outbreak, CDC will consider the need to recommend additional strategies including preemptive school dismissals.

Decisions to add strategies should be based on information on the severity of illness reported in national and global assessments, local goals, epidemiology, health care system capacity, and feasibility and acceptability of the strategies under consideration. The strategies which follow use a variety of methods for increasing social distance, while attempting to maintain operability of most schools. Feasibility and acceptability of these strategies will vary considerably across communities. Except for school dismissals, the following strategies have not been scientifically tested. But CDC wants communities to have tools to use that may be the right measures for their community and circumstances.

Active screening for illness

If influenza severity increases, schools should consider instituting active fever and respiratory infection symptom screening of students and staff when they arrive at school. At the beginning of the school day, all students and staff should be asked about suggestive symptoms such as fever, cough, runny nose, and sore throat during the previous 24 hours. Some persons with laboratory-confirmed influenza do not have a fever (between 10% and 40% of people). Therefore, absence of fever does not indicate absence of infection. In a higher severity situation, schools should send home persons with symptoms of acute respiratory infection (that is, any two of the following: sore throat, cough, runny nose [new and unexplained by allergies], or fever). As always, parents should be aware of their child’s health status and monitor them for illness every morning before school.

Throughout the day, staff should be vigilant in identifying students and other staff who appear ill. These students and staff should be further screened by the school nurse, or other school-based health care worker, by taking their temperature and inquiring further about symptoms. Students and staff who develop symptoms of acute respiratory infection at school should be separated from others until sent home. When possible and if the sick person can tolerate it, he or she should wear a surgical mask until sent home.

Permit high-risk students and staff to stay home

If influenza severity increases, students and staff at high risk for influenza complications may consider staying home from school while influenza transmission is high in their community if they, or their families, are concerned about their ability to avoid influenza at school. The decision about whether to stay home should be made in consultation with their health care provider.  People who elect to stay home from school should also attempt to decrease their exposure in other ways for example, by avoiding large public gatherings. Well students should be expected to continue their education while at home as much as possible.

Schools should prepare for discussions with parents about school safety and should consult with school boards and legal counsel about policy accommodations that might be necessary to allow students and staff at high risk for influenza complications to stay home. Local and state laws and policies also might need to be reviewed for applicability. Policies to be reviewed may be official or unofficial, such as school principals’ awards for students with perfect attendance. Schools should plan now for ways to continue educating students who stay home through methods such as instructional telephone calls, homework packets, internet-based lessons, and other distance-based learning approaches.

Students with ill household members stay home

If influenza severity increases, school-aged children who live with people with influenza-like illness should remain home for 5 days from the day the first household member got sick. This is the time period they are most likely to get sick themselves. The greatest risk of transmission is during the first 5 days of illness of the first ill household member (about 90%), with the largest transmission risk by Day 1 of this person’s illness (about 40%). Keeping all the children in the household at home during this time period may also keep the flu virus from being spread to others outside the home. If a household member develops an acute respiratory illness during this time, the recommendations for exclusion of persons with influenza-like illness should be implemented. The five-day period does not need to start again for other well children in the household.

Increase social distances within the school environment

If influenza severity increases, schools should explore innovative methods for increasing social distances within the school environment. The goal should be to keep distance between people at most times or to cluster students in small, consistent groups. This is not a simple or easy strategy for most schools. Implementing any of the following options would require considerable flexibility and willingness to change among students, staff, and families. Some possible options to increase the amount of space between students or to keep consistent groups of students include:

  • rotate teachers between classrooms while keeping the same group of students in one classroom (in middle and high school);
  • cancel classes that bring students together from multiple classrooms (in elementary school);
  • postpone class trips that bring students together from multiple classrooms or schools in large, densely-packed groups;
  • hold classes outdoors;
  • discourage use of school buses and public transit;
  • divide classes into smaller groups;
  • move desks farther apart; and
  • move classes to larger spaces, when available, to allow more space between students.

Extended exclusion period

If influenza severity increases, individuals with influenza-like illness should remain at home for at least 7 days, even if symptoms resolve sooner. Individuals who are still sick 7 days after they become ill should continue to stay home until at least 24 hours after symptoms have resolved.
This recommendation is based on viral shedding information. Influenza virus shedding general occurs for 5 to 7 days for seasonal influenza infection. This period may be longer for persons with 2009 H1N1 flu and among young children and people who are immunocompromised. Longer periods of exclusion also may be considered based on setting- and population-specific characteristics. Schools also might prefer a longer period so that students and staff feel able to fully function at school after recovery from their illness. 

Sick individuals should stay at home until the end of the exclusion period, to the extent possible, except when necessary to seek required medical care. Sick individuals should avoid contact with others. CDC recommends this exclusion period whether or not antiviral medications are used. People on antiviral treatment may shed influenza viruses that are resistant to antiviral medications. 

When people who have had influenza-like illness return to school they should continue to practice good respiratory etiquette and hand hygiene and avoid close contact with people likely to be at increased risk of influenza-related complications. To lessen the chance of spreading influenza viruses that are resistant to antiviral medications, adherence to good respiratory etiquette and hand hygiene is as important for people taking antiviral medications as it is for others.

For more information on caring for sick persons in the home, see Taking Care of a Sick Person in Your Home.

School dismissals: reactive and preemptive

In case influenza severity increases, CDC recommends that communities review and prepare to implement their school dismissal plans according to the guidelines outlined below. School and health officials should balance the risks of influenza in their community with the disruption dismissals will cause in both education and the wider community. School officials should work closely and directly with their local and state public health officials to make sound decisions, based on local conditions, and to implement strategies in a coordinated manner.

When communities choose to use school dismissal, education and public health officials should clearly state to parents and their communities the reason for dismissing students and the type of school dismissal they are implementing. There are three types of school dismissals: selective (described above), reactive, and preemptive.

Reactive dismissals might be appropriate when schools are experiencing excessive absenteeism among students or staff, a large number of children are visiting the school health office or being sent home from school during the school day with documented fever, the school is not able to keep potentially infectious people out, or for other reasons that decrease the ability to maintain school functioning. Reactive dismissals might reduce the burden on the local health care system.

As with selective dismissals, the decision to dismiss students should be made locally and should balance the goal of reducing the number of people who become seriously ill or die from influenza with the goal of minimizing social disruption. School officials are encouraged to work collaboratively and communicate with neighboring districts or schools to keep others in the region aware of actions that are taken. Officials might decide to dismiss or not dismiss students from their own schools based on the experiences of their neighbors. The risk to students and staff from an ongoing school-based outbreak if potentially infectious individuals cannot be excluded from school may also lead some jurisdictions to decide to close schools. In this case, school-related mass gatherings also should be cancelled or postponed.

Preemptive dismissals can be used to decrease the spread of influenza virus or to reduce demand on the health care system. If global or national risk assessments indicate an increased level of severity compared with the spring 2009 H1N1 influenza outbreak, CDC might recommend preemptive school dismissals. If schools are dismissed, school-related mass gatherings should be cancelled or postponed. This would include sporting events, school dances, performances, rallies, commencement ceremonies, and other events that bring large groups of people into close proximity with one another.
School dismissal is likely to be more effective in decreasing the spread of influenza virus in the community when used early in relation to the appearance of the virus in the community and when used in conjunction with other strategies (for example, cancellation of community sporting events and other mass gatherings). Cancellation or postponement of community events is a decision of event organizers, local public health officials and other government agencies and should be part of a coordinated community process.

A vaccine for 2009 H1N1 flu will likely become available in fall 2009. For children, at least, protective immunity will require 2 doses of vaccine, separated by at least 3 weeks and an additional 2 weeks for the immune response to develop (that is, approximately 5 weeks after the first vaccination). If an increase in community-wide transmission occurs shortly before vaccine-induced immunity is anticipated, or before a scheduled vacation, some jurisdictions may consider preemptive dismissals.

Resuming classes after a dismissal

The length of time students should be dismissed from school will vary depending on the type of school dismissal as well as the severity and extent of illness.  When the decision is made to dismiss students, CDC recommends doing so for 5 to 7 calendar days. Reactive school dismissals are likely to be of shorter duration than selective or preemptive dismissals. Because the goals of selective dismissals (to protect students and staff at high risk of severe illness or death) and preemptive dismissals (to decrease the spread of influenza virus) are usually different from those of reactive dismissals, the length of time schools are dismissed might be longer.

On a regular basis (for example, weekly) communities that have dismissed students from school should reassess the epidemiology of the disease, the benefits of keeping students home, and the societal repercussions of doing so. Based on this reassessment, communities may decide either to extend the school dismissal or to reopen schools. In the event that CDC recommends preemptive school dismissals, this recommendation also might include a modification to the suggested length of dismissal, based on the severity observed across the nation and globally. Therefore, schools and school boards should plan for more prolonged periods of school dismissal. If schools attempt to continue educational services to all students during a lengthy school dismissal, students with disabilities should receive comparable access to education.

The authority for decision-making regarding school dismissal may reside in multiple sectors of state and local government; these entities must work in a coordinated manner. National, regional, or local data, and the decision-making guidance included in this document, may be useful for determining whether to dismiss schools. 

Reducing adverse effects from school dismissal

As part of a community planning process, school dismissal plans should address possible secondary effects on the community. The planning process should include communicating these plans with all community members affected by school dismissal. These might include effects on critical infrastructure, parents’ job security and income loss, school funding due to funding calculations based on attendance, child nutrition due to the loss of access to the school meals program, loss of access to health services, educational progress, and child safety due to possibly increased unsupervised time. Communities should prepare to address these secondary effects so as to increase the acceptability of and participation in school dismissal. Parents should plan for child care while schools are dismissed, as these decisions may be made very quickly.

Communities should also plan to allow school staff to use school facilities while students are dismissed. Keeping school facilities open may allow teachers to develop and deliver lessons and materials (for example, by using school teleconference lines or other distance-based education delivery systems) and other staff to provide essential services (such as preparation of meals) keeping in mind basic infection control practices.

If school is dismissed, let CDC, the U.S. Department of Education, and your state health and education agencies know by submitting a simple report at www.cdc.gov/FluSchoolDismissal.

Roles

Collaboration is essential: many different stakeholders have important roles to play in the decision-making process, implementing strategies, and ensuring their effectiveness. To be most effective, these activities must be coordinated at the federal, state, and local levels.

  • CDC will continue to monitor the spread and severity of influenza illness, monitor for changes in circulating influenza viruses that may confer increased severity of disease, identify promising methods for reducing morbidity and mortality, assist state and local health and education agencies to implement those methods and evaluate their effectiveness, and provide timely updates on new scientific findings as well as additional guidance as the situation warrants.
  • The U.S. Department of Education (ED) will collaborate with federal, state, and local agencies as well as non-governmental entities to disseminate new guidance, provide support to state and local education agencies, and work with states to provide flexibility in regulations around funding.
  • ED, state public health and education agencies, and CDC will monitor school dismissals and other related issues.
  • State and local public health and education agencies should work together to decide which strategies to implement and when, collect and share data, and disseminate emerging guidance.
  • Schools should examine and revise, as necessary, their current crisis or pandemic plans and procedures, including updating contact information, and communicate with vendors who supply critical products or services to plan for continuation of those services throughout the flu season. Critical services may include food service, hygiene supplies, and personal protective equipment for staff. This planning is especially important when suppliers may be small businesses in the local area that could also be affected by a flu outbreak.
  • Schools should be a resource for families to help mitigate the secondary effects of school dismissals by referring them to assistance in the community or, where feasible, by providing direct assistance. Schools can communicate with families and the community about what they will do to decrease spreading influenza illness; and help families and communities understand the important roles they can play in reducing the spread of influenza and keeping schools open.
  • Students, staff, and their families must take personal responsibility for staying home when ill, practicing hand hygiene and respiratory etiquette, and planning in advance for child care in the event of a school dismissal.
  • Private sector support is essential for working parents and guardians who need to stay home to care for an ill child or find alternate child care in the event of a school dismissal. The economic impact of a school dismissal can have ripple-effects throughout the community and local economy.  Flexible leave and workplace policies can keep parents from losing pay or even their jobs.
  • Community-based and faith-based organizations can provide crucial support to families by educating community members about the importance of staying home when ill, hand hygiene, and respiratory etiquette. Often, they also can provide meals, alternative child care sites, transportation, and other services to ease the burden of staying home.

Deciding on a course of action

To decrease exposure of students and school staff to the influenza virus, CDC recommends a combination of targeted, layered strategies applied early and simultaneously based on trends in the severity of the disease, characteristics of the virus, expected impact, feasibility, and acceptability. These issues should be determined through collaborative decision-making involving education and public health agencies, parents, and the community.

CDC and its partners will continuously look for changes in the severity of influenza-like illness and will share what is learned with state and local agencies. However, states and local communities can expect to see a lot of differences in disease burden across the country.

Every state and community has to balance a variety of objectives to determine their best course of action to help decrease the spread of influenza. Decision-makers should explicitly identify and communicate their objectives which might be one or more of the following: (a) protecting overall public health by reducing community transmission; (b) reducing transmission in students and school staff; and (c) protecting people with high-risk conditions. 

Some strategies can have negative consequences in addition to their potential benefits. In the particular case of school dismissals, decision-makers also must consider and balance additional factors: (a) how to ensure students continue to learn; (2) how to provide an emotionally and physically safe place for students; and (3) how to reduce demands on local health care services.  The following questions can help begin discussions and lead to decisions at the state and local levels.

Decision-makers and stakeholders

Are all the right decision-makers and stakeholders involved in the decision-making process?

  • Identify the decision-makers. In different jurisdictions, local and state health, education, and homeland security agencies may have relevant decision-making responsibilities.  Direct involvement of governors, mayors, public health officials, or school superintendents may be needed.
  • Identify the stakeholders. Stakeholders will vary from community to community but may include parent representatives, students, local business and faith community representatives, teachers, health care providers, hospitals, community organizations, school nurses, school food service directors, and vendors that supply schools.

What is the process for working together?

  • Do you have a process for regular input and collaboration on decisions?
  • Are there strong, open communication channels between health and education officials? Does this include frequent information sharing?
  • Do you regularly review your crisis and pandemic plans? Do you revise as needed?

Information collection and sharing

Can local or state health officials determine and share information about the following?

  • What is the severity and extent of spread of the disease in the state or locality? What is the rate of outpatient visits for influenza-like illness? What is the local hospitalization rate for influenza-like illness? Are the numbers of hospitalizations or deaths increasing? What percent of these hospitalized patients require admission to intensive care units? How many influenza deaths have occurred in the community? Are some groups being disproportionately affected?
  • How busy are local health care providers and emergency departments? How many visits are they getting for influenza-like illness? Are they able to meet the increased demand for care from persons with influenza-like illness? Are local health care providers or emergency departments becoming overburdened?
  • Are the hospital and intensive care unit (ICU) beds full with influenza patients? Is there available space in the ICUs? Are there enough ventilators?
  • Do the hospitals have enough staff to provide care? Is there increasing absenteeism in health care workers due to influenza-like illness in themselves or their family members?
  • Is there enough antiviral medication to treat sick patients at high risk for complications?

Can local education agencies or schools determine and share information about the following?

  • What are school absenteeism rates? How many visits are being made to school health offices daily?  How many students with influenza-like illness are being sent home during the school day?

Feasibility

Do you have the resources to implement the strategies being considered?

  • What resources are available? Do you have access to the funds, personnel, equipment, and space needed?
  • How long will the strategies take to implement? How long can the strategies be sustained?
  • Are changes to legal authority or policy needed? How feasible are these changes?
  • How can you most clearly communicate with the community about steps parents, students, individuals and families need to take and the reasons for recommendations?

Acceptability

Have you determined how to address the following challenges to implementing the strategies?

  • How are public concerns affecting the community? What can you do to empower personal responsibility for protective actions?
  • Will the community support the strategies under consideration? What can you do to increase support?
  • What secondary effects (for example, child nutrition, job security, financial support, health service access, and educational progress) might result from the strategies under consideration? Can you get the message out to businesses and employers that they need to have flexible leave policies that align with public health recommendations?
  • Can these secondary effects be mitigated? Which community entities and organizations can help reduce the secondary effects?
  • What can be done to increase community buy-in?

http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/schools/technicalreport.htm

"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."   G Orwell
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2009 at 8:18pm

I think I will ask to put some of this info in the library...

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote scimla Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2009 at 8:19pm
  I do not want to be redundant but the best way is to clean & disinfect schhol premises daily! The virus can be physically destroyed when they are most vulnerable on surfaces before causing any infection. It works! Daily hospitals & other medical institutions are performing this PREVENTIVE MEASURE to prevent infection in their facilities! Do not wait for outbreaks of the disease they can be prevented! 
scimla7seven
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2009 at 9:00pm
.
 

Mrs. Napolitano said the decision to close schools in the event of increased infection rates should be made at the local level.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2009 at 9:02pm
Daily
 
No the challenge is much greater than that. The local highschool has 7 hours with students changing rooms and desks 7 times. Just surface managemnt is a nightmare scenario. thats not counting lunch time and school buses.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2009 at 9:03pm
Maryo008
 
They are all available in PDF as well.
 
 
 
 
SmileSmile
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2009 at 12:49pm

School nurses in short supply

 

By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY

If swine flu reappears in schools this fall, it'll probably be a school nurse who first discovers it. But nationwide, the ratio of nurses to students falls short of the federally recommended standard, raising concerns that the shortage could undermine efforts to catch and control what could be a deadly flu season.

 

A USA TODAY analysis of U.S. Census data from 2005 to 2007 suggests that each school nurse cares, on average, for 971 students. In 13 states, the ratio is more than 2,000 to 1.

In its own 2007 survey, the National Association of School Nurses found the ratio was 1,151 students per nurse.

In either analysis, the nurse workload exceeds the recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: one nurse per 750 students.

FIND MORE STORIES IN: Swine flu

"Either way, it's not good for kids out there who have no safety net," says Amy Garcia, executive director of the National Association of School Nurses.

 

Further, the association recommends a 1-to-225 ratio for schools that require "daily professional school nursing services" and 1-to-125 in schools with "complex health care needs."

Data from the Department of Education, which examines only schools that have nurses, show that workloads for elementary school nurses have remained essentially unchanged since 1999 at about 455 students per nurse. But in secondary schools, workloads have grown 14%, from 733 students per nurse to 835.

Nationwide, an estimated 45% of public schools have a full-time nurse on staff, the nurses association says. Add part-time nurses and the figure jumps to 75%. But that leaves 25% of schools with no nurse at all.

New CDC guidelines released last week discourage schools from closing even if the H1N1 virus, or swine flu, strikes. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said only schools with "high numbers of high-risk students" showing symptoms should consider closing, but she warned that shutting down a school, even temporarily, "causes a very significant ripple effect" in the community.

Instead, the new CDC guidelines say ill students should be kept out of school until 24 hours after their fever subsides.

Schools' first line of defense: frequent hand washing, coughing etiquette, routine cleaning and close monitoring of symptoms. In schools where students show symptoms, Education Secretary Arne Duncan says educators should set aside a room for students, "a safe place for them to stay" until they can go home.

By the numbers:

Nationally, the ratio of nurses to students falls short of the recommended federal standard: 1 nurse per 750 students, which could affect how well schools can control an outbreak of the H1N1 virus, or swine flu. The National Association of School Nurses in 2008 calculated how many students there were per registered school nurse in all 50 states, Washington D.C. and the Overseas School Health Nurses Association representing Department of Defense schools.

 

Number of students per nurse:

 
 
Vermont 275
New Hampshire 347
Massachusetts 419
OSHNA 445
Connecticut 460
Delaware 519
Alaska 530
Kansas 552
Wyoming 595
Maine 602
Rhode Island 632
Washington, D.C. 652
New Jersey 674
Missouri 748
New Mexico 780
Pennsylvania 832
Texas 841
Virginia 873
Iowa 889
South Carolina 901
Maryland 913
Alabama 936
New York 1,007
Indiana 1,022
Washington 1,060
Arkansas 1,084
West Virginia 1,159
South Dakota 1,195
Arizona 1,217
North Carolina 1,320
Mississippi 1,394
Nebraska 1,407
Tennessee 1,415
Georgia 1,734
Minnesota 1,803
Nevada 1,814
Louisiana 1,868
Kentucky 1,877
Colorado 2,101
California 2,240
Wisconsin 2,359
Idaho 2,368
Ohio 2,377
Florida 2,605
North Dakota 2,828
Illinois 2,893
Oklahoma 3,110
Montana 3,137
Oregon 3,142
Michigan 4,204
Utah 4,893
Hawaii has no school RNs

 
Contributing: Jack Gillum
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2009 at 1:30pm
interesting article...
 
 
 
New CDC guidelines released ...last week
 
 
discourage schools from closing even if the H1N1 virus, or swine flu,
 
 
strikes. Pig
 
 
 
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said
 
 
only schools with
 
 
"high numbers of high-risk students" showing symptoms
 
should consider closing,
 
 
but she warned that shutting down a school, even temporarily,
 
 
"causes a very significant ripple effect" in the community.
 
 
new CDC guidelines say
 
ill students should be kept out of school
 
until 24 hours after their fever subsides.
.............................................................
 
 We gave it a thumbs down...
 
 
and then it hit me...  the kids who need the 2 meals a day at school...need to get back there to eat and get well.    
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Has anyone read this or know whether these reccomendations are real?
 __________________________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________________________
School-Age Children, Pregnant Women and Health Care Workers: Take Swine Flu Precautions by Washing with Cleanser that Kills Virus for Up to Six Hours
 

NORCROSS, Ga., Aug. 12 /PRNewswire/ -- With the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announcing the potential for an unusual number of serious illnesses in school-age children (ages 5-24) and pregnant women from the H1N1 virus (swine flu)(i,ii), washing hands with soap that can kill the virus immediately and continue to kill it for up to six hours could mean the difference between getting swine flu or avoiding it, especially before a vaccine is expected to be available in mid-October.

As with other flu viruses, the swine flu is spread via contact with infected droplets or surfaces followed by contact with a person's eyes, nose or mouth.(iii) Frequent hand washing with soap or the use of alcohol-based hand sanitizers (when no sink is available) will kill or remove the virus. However, the challenge is washing consistently after touching any surface such as a door handle, chair or desk or any person that could have been exposed to the virus. Cleansers that contain 4 percent chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) bond to the skin and continue to actively kill germs for up to six hours.(iv) That's almost an entire school or work day.

CHG offers better protection between washings, even if you are able to wash your hands frequently. Two over-the-counter brands that contain 4 percent CHG are Hibiclens(R) skin cleanser and Hibistat(R) individual wipes. Hibiclens and Hibistat have specifically been tested against a strain of the swine flu virus similar to the one that is currently causing illness in the community.(v) Since these strains are of the same virus family, these products will effectively kill both types of flu virus for up to six hours.

For moms, the swine flu is a major concern since both children and pregnant women are part of the high-risk groups. CDC says pregnant women have higher rates of hospitalization and a greater risk of death compared to the general population and recommends that antiviral treatment be started within 48 hours after symptoms begin.(vi)

"I'm very concerned," said Jeanne Fuller, mother of Adam, 5, and Sam, 3, and 30 weeks pregnant with her third child. "I admit when I heard that pregnant women were at higher risk, especially late in pregnancy, I panicked. I ran to the store to get antibacterial everything. That's when I learned about Hibiclens and have been using it ever since. My oldest son starts kindergarten this year and who knows what kind of new bugs he will encounter. If he gets sick, I will be the one caring for him and I have to protect the baby, too," she said.

To help moms like Fuller, physicians are recommending long-lasting, germ-killing products, such as Hibiclens.

Doug Smith, M.D., an emergency department (ED) physician in Miami, Fla., knows what it's like to see a bad flu season take its toll. "I tell all of my patients to be sure to wash their hands - they just can't do it enough. And for those who might be at high-risk or need longer protection than just a few minutes, I recommend using washes with 4 percent CHG since it kills germs for hours. That's what we have been using in our facility for years and we continue to use it to protect us," said Smith.

Molnlycke Health Care provides the following tips for staying healthy this swine flu season.

  • Wash your hands frequently with soap and water or an alcohol-based sanitizer (if a sink is not available).(vii)
  • Wash hands after touching anything that might not have been washed with soap or a disinfectant recently.
  • Wash hands with cleansers that contain 4 percent chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) in order to kill the virus for a long period of time.
  • Keep hands away from eyes, nose and mouth.
  • Cough or sneeze into your elbow rather than hand to reduce the risk of transfer.
  • Avoid crowds (or at least try to keep your distance from others).
  • Get plenty of sleep and exercise.
  • Stay home if you are experiencing flu symptoms (fatigue, fever, nausea, etc).
  • Isolate individuals that are ill or have flu like symptoms, especially in a family.
  • Use the hottest water possible in your washing machine, especially for sports and school uniforms, and dry everything completely.

About Molnlycke Health Care US, LLC

Molnlycke Health Care US, LLC, consists of two divisions - Surgical and Wound Care. Focusing on prevention of surgically-related infections for both patients and healthcare workers, the Surgical Division (formerly Regent Medical Americas, LLC) encompasses the world's leading manufacturer and supplier of powder-free surgical gloves (Biogel(R) surgical gloves); the number one supplier (by value) of skin cleanser (Hibiclens(R) and Hibistat(R) antiseptics); and BARRIER(R) protective clothing. A leader in trauma and pain management, the Wound Care Division's market dynamics are driven by an aging population, higher incidence of pressure ulcers and increased home treatment.

i) Steenhuysen J, Fox M. (2009, July 17). www.reuters.com. "CDC fears more swine flu cases in fall." Retrieved August 3, 2009, fromhttp://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE56G5DD20090717

ii) Stobbe, M. (2009, July 26). www.usatoday.com. "Swine flu could hit up to 40% in U.S. this year and next without vaccine." Retrieved August 3, 2009, fromhttp://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-07-26-swineflu27_N.htm

iii) Erin M. Sorrell, Hongquan Wan, Yonas Araya, Haichen Song, and Daniel R. Perez, "Minimal molecular constraints for respiratory droplet transmission of an avian-human H9N2 influenza A virus."http://www.pnas.org/content/106/18/7565. Last accessed July 10, 2009.

iv) Regent Medical Study #030917-150.

v) Independent lab test time-kill for Swine Flu virus (H1N1 Virus strain A/Swine/Iowa/15/30).

vi) Dooren, JC. (2009, July 29). www.wsj.com. "CDC Says Pregnant Women With Flu Symptoms Should Receive Anti-Viral Drugs." Retrieved August 4, 2009, fromhttp://online.wsj.com/article/SB124885469827889531.html.

vii) "Novel H1N1 Flu Situation Update."http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1 flu/update.htm. Last accessed July 10, 2009


SOURCE Molnlycke Health Care

 
 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote newgirl Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2009 at 6:09am
Public school started here this week.  There are no hand-sanitizers and no one has even mentioned swine flu nor was a letter or anything sent home.  You'd never even know there was a flu pandemic.  At the very least you'd think they'd at least be saying "wash your hands" or "sneeze into your elbow" or "stay home if you have a fever".  But, nope.  Nada.

I did see at Walmart they had bottles of hand-sanitizer mixed in the aisles with the schools supplies.  No one, however, seemed to be buying any as there was none missing.  Unhappy
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Swine flu closes Ky. school for a week
 
JUNCTION CITY, Ky. � A central Kentucky public school has been closed for the week after students and teachers became ill and an eastern Kentucky school is shut down because of swine flu.
 
In Boyle County, Junction City Elementary School is closed until next week. School officials said dozens of students and several teachers were absent on Monday � most of them with flulike symptoms. The school has about 350 students. The rest of Boyle County's schools remain open.

In Letcher County, Martha Jane Potter Elementary School canceled classes on Tuesday and Wednesday.

WYMT-TV in Hazard reported school officials sent a letter to parents, stating a case of swine flu had been detected and school was closed as a precaution. The letter said the infected student had not been at school since last week and the building was being sanitized.���Information from: WYMT-TV, http://www.wkyt.com/wymtnews

 
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Swine flu cases being seen in some schools

06:44 PM CDT on Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Meg Farris / Eyewitness News

mfarris@wwltv.com

NEW ORLEANS, La. – A New Orleans day care center has closed for a week and a Catholic School in St. Charles Parish is doing some extra cleaning after each had confirmed cases of the H1N1 virus, which is commonly called the swine flu.

< = =text/> var jsVideoWidgetSize = 1; var jsVideoWidgetVideoId = 390264;
Video: Watch the Story

Two children at the Tulane-operated Kidopolis day care center in downtown New Orleans and two children at the St. Charles Borromeo school in St. Charles Parish have been reported to have tested positive for the virus.

The playground at the Kidopolis day care center was quiet Friday after the center closed its doors for the entire week.

The University Communications Department would only issue a statement via e-mail.

"Two children who attend the Kidopolis child care center operated by Tulane University are confirmed to have H1N1 flu,” wrote Deborah L. Grant, Vice President of University Communications at Tulane. “Several more students, teachers and administrators exhibited flu-like symptoms and were sent home to await test results." 

The University says that one of the reasons the center will be closed for the entire week is because with the number of sick teachers and administrators there is no longer the mandated teacher-child ratio to keep it open.

Doctors are not surprised that they are seeing swine flu now that school is back open.

"The issue really is going to be because they are in close proximity to one another and there is no immunity in the community currently because the vaccination is not available yet. This is going to be transmitted easily amongst children, amongst young adults, amongst older adults," said Dr. Fred Lopez, an infectious disease specialist at LSU Health Sciences Center.

In St. Charles Parish, H1N1 or swine flu cases, have also shown up at St. Charles Borromeo. Siblings, one in Pre-K and one in first grade are home with the swine flu, but the school remains open.

"There's no major scrubbing of walls or things like that, but things like door knobs, things like the bathrooms, are being cleaned more than once a day, things that teachers are using, staff are using, keyboards, all of that stuff is being wiped down according to CDC regulations," said Sarah Comiskey, the Director of Communications for the Archdiocese of New Orleans.

The Archdiocese says these are the only two cases in any of its schools and parents were notified last Friday.

"All we're doing is really trying to make sure the teachers are aware of noticing any symptoms, parents are aware of noticing any symptoms," Comiskey explained. 

Doctors can not stress enough how important it is to wash your hands regularly, and cough or sneeze into your sleeve, not your hands. And they say the swine flu is the virus that is going around now.

"Schools have done absolutely nothing wrong. The difference this year is that this flu virus, is healthier in the warmer months than it is in the usual colder months when we see the usual seasonal flu," Dr. Lopez said.

The Centers for Disease Control states that all children should stay home until they have been without fever for 24 hours.

But doctors say children with conditions such as asthma and children five and younger, are more likely to have severe complications from the flu. So day care centers should think about closing.

_________________________________________________________
Local news video at site
 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2009 at 10:42am
"...Several more students, teachers and administrators exhibited flu-like symptoms and were sent home to await test results." 
............................................................
 
 
The parents and Doctors will decide .. thank you.
 
 
all children should stay home until they have been without fever for 24 hours.
...................................
 
 
I see they are still printing that foolishness.
 
Totally not helpful... many do not have fever... or show few signs of this flu.
 
 
..................
 
 
...because limited information is available on the virus, a person should be considered contagious up until seven days after the onset of illness.
 
 
..................
 
 
 
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I totally agree Mary008
 
I think were making a big mistake trying to hand this off to the schools as the frontline people. Teachers are not medical professionals by choice, and should not be put into the roll of medical symptom surveillance. Once again an easy target when things go wrong.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2009 at 10:17pm
 
 Children and likely adults...will go back out and spread the virus...this is why it is so infective, and many will get it, very difficult to hide away from it.
 
 
 
Article  posted by... Sleusha at swineflu.org
 

 

Even after 5 days of Tamiflu, kids carry virus for 3 weeks

 
 
Kounteya Sinha, TNN 12 August 2009, 02:47am IST
 
 
 
NEW DELHI: Children, mostly below 12 years of age and infected with H1N1 swine flu, can continue to infect those around them for almost three weeks
 
after onset of symptoms. Doctors scanning and treating infected H1N1 patients in government hospitals across India have found that some children, who were infected with the deadly swine flu virus and cured after a five-day Tamiflu-regimen, continue to carry the virus in their nasal cavity.

Interestingly, the virus potency reduces in such cases because of which the child remains asymptomatic but then becomes a carrier of the virus capable of infecting others for two more weeks. This phenomenon is also found in people with immuno-suppressive diseases like HIV, infected with H1N1. According to experts, this is usually common in cases infected with seasonal influenza viruses but has now been found to be true even with the novel H1N1 virus.

Speaking to TOI, professor of medicine at AIIMS Dr Randeep Guleria said, "We have scientific evidence which proves than children can be long-term carriers of the H1N1 virus even after they have been completely treated of the infection. Children and HIV patients after the five-day two-times-a-day Tamiflu regimen might not show symptoms of the
disease but the virus may continue to line their nasal cavity or throat."

Dr Guleria added, "This may be primarily because both children and HIV patients have a weak
immunity system because of which complete virus eradication takes a longer period. Their body may have managed to eliminate the virus which remains in slight quantities in the nasal passages. This is why the body does not show it is infected after a Tamiflu treatment." This finding is crucial for India where majority of the cases are in the school-going age group.

A recent analysis of age-based
infection amongst 615 positive cases in India by the health ministry had found that the worst affected was the 10-14 year group with the 5-9 years group not far behind.

A scientists at the National Institute of Communicable Diseases told TOI, "Children mostly six years or younger can spread the virus much longer than adults. But the question is whether this is a serious problem because children after five days of Tamiflu show no symptoms. So then don't cough or sneeze. Therefore, they can't expose others to infection since influenza viruses spread from person to person primarily through large-particle respiratory droplet transmission." He added, "
Usually when we do find cases where children still harbour the virus after five days of treatment, we add five more days of Tamiflu."

So what should children once infected with H1N1 and cured do? Dr Guleria said, "They must continue basic cough hygiene like covering their
mouths and sneezing for two weeks after being discharged. They must avoid contact with high risk groups."
 
 
 
.....................
 
 
 
 
 
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 ...people with school age kids may want this info. 

 
CDC Novel H1N1 Vaccination Planning Q&A

August 10, 2009, 11:45 AM ET
 
Vaccine Distribution
.....................................
 
 
 
excerpt
.................
 
 
 
Q. How many manufacturers are producing vaccine?
 
 
A. Five manufacturers are producing vaccine for the U.S.: Sanofi Pasteur, Novartis, GSK, Medimmune and CSL.
 
 
 
Q. How will vaccine be shipped to projects areas (CDC Public Health Emergency Preparedness grantees)?
 
 
A. Vaccine will be shipped to clinics, offices, health departments, and other project area-designated sites which may include a mix of public health and private sector sites via centralized distribution. This is the same process that is used to ship vaccines for the childhood immunization program to immunization providers. CDC's centralized distribution mechanism will be substantially enhanced to provide capacity for this activity in addition to shipping of other vaccines.
 
 
 
 
Q. Will project areas (CDC Public Health Emergency Preparedness grantees) be able to limit the amount of vaccine they receive?
 
 
A. Yes, project areas will be able to determine what proportion of their allocation they wish to receive.
 
 
 
 
Q. How frequently will vaccine shipments arrive?
 
 
A. As details of distribution are finalized, CDC will communicate with states about the anticipated time period between placing vaccine orders and receiving shipments.
 
 
 
 
Q. How many sites can be designated as vaccine receiving sites?
 
 
A.One of the key benefits of using a centralized, third party distributor to support H1N1 vaccine distribution is that it allows distribution of doses to a much larger number of providers sites than would be feasible with direct manufacturer distribution.  Thus, we will be able to serve a significantly larger provider base than the original state ship to sites, and are planning to be able to accommodate more providers than are currently served by the VFC program.  More information, including any limitations in the number of vaccine receiving sites, will be shared with state planners as soon as it becomes available. 
 
 
 
Q. Will vaccine be in multi-dose vials?
 
 
A. The majority of vaccine will be in multi-dose vials, the remainder in single dose syringes or nasal sprayers. The aim is to have enough vaccine in single dose syringes (i.e. preservative free) for young children and pregnant women.
 
 
Vaccine Allocation
 
Q. How will vaccine be allocated among project areas (the CDC PHEP grantees)?
 
 
A. Vaccine will be allocated to each project area in proportion to its population (pro rata).
 
 
 
 
Q. Will there be a separate allocation for active duty DOD?
 
 
A. Yes, there will be a separate allocation for active duty DoD. It is not included in the project area allocations.
 
 
 
 
Q. Will there be a separate allocation for DoD dependants, retirees and civilian employees?
 
 
A.There is no separate allocation for these groups. Military facilities may be willing to vaccinate these groups, but will need to be allocated vaccine for these populations by the project areas.
 
 
 
 
Q. Will there be a separate vaccine allocation for IHS-served populations and other tribal communities?
 
 
A. There will be no separate allocation. States and local areas need to work with their tribal populations to ensure access to vaccine.
Ancillary Supplies
 
 
 
 
Q. Which ancillary supplies will be provided with vaccine?
 
 
A. HHS will provide needles, syringes, sharps containers and alcohol swabs.
 
 
 
 
Q. How will ancillary supplies be distributed?
 
 
A. Ancillary supplies will be distributed to the same project area-designated sites as vaccine. Plans for ensuring the distribution of these products are currently being developed.
 
 
 
Vaccine Administration
 
Q. Will two doses of vaccine be required?
 
 
A. This will not be known until the late summer- early fall, once clinical trials are completed. For planning purposes, planners should assume that two doses will be needed.
 
 
 
 
Q. What will be the recommended interval between the first and second dose?
 
 
A. This will not be known until clinical trials are complete. For planning purposes, planners should assume 21-28 days between the first and second vaccination.
 
 
 
 
Q. How much Thimerosal-free vaccine will be available?
 
 
A. It is anticipated that enough thimerosal-free vaccine in pre-loaded syringes will be available for young children and pregnant women.
 
 
 
 
Q. Will there be federal requirements to recall persons for their second dose, if a second dose is needed?
 
 
A. There will be no federal requirement to send out recall notices. Providing information on second dose at the time of the first dose, as well as using the media to disseminate this message will be the primary means of educating persons about who needs a second dose administered.
 
 
 
 
Q. Will it be necessary for the first and second dose to be the same product?
 
 
A. Ideally, first and second doses would be from the same product. However, practical considerations make this difficult to implement. Planners should assume they will be interchangeable. 
 
 
 
 
Q. Can seasonal vaccine and novel H1N1 vaccine be administered at the same time?
 
A. Clinical trials are exploring this question. It is anticipated that seasonal vaccine and novel H1N1 vaccines may be administered together.
 
 
 
Q. Will vaccine be adjuvanted?
 
A. It is unlikely H1N1 vaccine will be adjuvanted. Definitive information will be available once clinical trial data are available.
 
 
 
Q. If vaccine is adjuvanted, how will it be formulated?
 
 
A. Formulation will vary by provider. For Novartis, vaccine may be preformulated with adjuvant. For CSL, GSK and Sanofi Pasteur, mixing of vaccine and adjuvant at the site of administration will be necessary. Specific information on storage requirements and procedures for mixing vaccine and adjuvant will be provided by CDC. Medimmune vaccine will not be adjuvanted.
 
 
 
Q. Will the vaccine be administered under EUA (Emergency Use Authorization)?
 
A.  EUA will not be used for unadjuvanted vaccine if FDA licenses the vaccine under the current BLA (Biologics License Application) as a strain change.
 

Q. For whom will novel H1N1 vaccine be recommended?
 
 
A. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) met on July 29th to develop recommendations on who should receive the novel 2009-H1N1 vaccine when it becomes available, and to determine which groups of the population should be prioritized if the vaccine is initially available in extremely limited quantities.
 
 
 
The committee recommended that vaccination efforts initially focus on
 
5 target groups:
................................
 
 
vaccination for pregnant women,
 
 
people who live with or care for children younger than 6 months of age,
 
 
healthcare and emergency medical services personnel,
 
 
persons between the ages of 6 months through 24 years, and
 
 
people ages 25 through 64 years who are at higher risk for novel H1N1
 
 
because of chronic health disorders or compromised immune systems. We do not expect that there will be a shortage of novel H1N1 vaccine, but flu vaccine availability and demand can be unpredictable and there is some possibility that initially, the vaccine will be available in limited quantities.
 
 
So, the ACIP also made recommendations regarding which people within the groups listed above should be prioritized if the vaccine is initially available in extremely limited quantities. For more information see the CDC press release CDC Advisors Make Recommendations for Use of Vaccine Against Novel H1N1.
 
Once the demand for vaccine for the prioritized groups has been met at the local level, programs and providers should also begin vaccinating everyone from the ages of 25 through 64 years.

Current studies indicate that the risk for infection among persons age 65 or older is less than the risk for younger age groups. However, once vaccine demand among younger age groups has been met, programs and providers should offer vaccination to people 65 or older. (see http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/vaccination/acip.htm)
 
 
Q. Will there be flexibility in how states implement the recommendations?
 
A. The ACIP recommendations leave room for flexibility at the local level depending on the local vaccine supply situation.
 
 
Q. Given the potential for large amounts of vaccine available during the first month of vaccine shipments, are priority groups needed?
 
A. It is not expected that there will be a shortage of novel H1N1 vaccine, but availability and demand can be unpredictable, and there is some possibility that initially the vaccine will be available in limited quantities and priority groups may be needed.
 
 
 
Q. Will there be requirements regarding documentation of priority group membership?
 
A. There will be no federal requirements for vaccinators to require documentation of priority group status such as a doctor’s note documenting pregnancy or risk status.
 
 
 
Doses administered Monitoring:
 
 
Q. What are the minimum data elements required by CDC?
 
A.  Minimum data requirements include age group, 1st or 2nd dose, date of vaccination, and state.
 
Pneumococcal vaccination:
 
Q. Are there any changes in recommendations for pneumococcal vaccines?
 
A. The ACIP recommends that persons recommended for pneumococcal vaccine receive it in light of the potential for increased risk of pneumococcal disease associated with influenza.

 
 
There are at present no recommendations to give pneumococcal vaccine to groups for whom it is not currently recommended. ACIP will revisit this question over the summer as epidemiologic data from the Southern hemisphere influenza season and from the U.S. become available.

 
source
..................
 
 
........................
 
 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mahshadin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2009 at 2:27pm

12 Swine Flu Cases At 11 Orange Co. Schools

Posted: 4:54 pm EDT August 26, 2009Updated: 5:08 pm EDT August 26, 2009

ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. -- The Orange County School Board called an emergency meeting Wednesday with Eyewitness News to get the word out that they have 12 cases of swine flu at 11 different schools across the county. School district health officials characterized the list of illnesses as good, but they admit they're not sure what to expect.

Just three days into the school year and 11 schools in the Orange County School District are on the swine flu watch list. But this year, kids are simply sent home. There is not talk of closings unless significant trends emerge.

"The district will look at a variety of factors, high absenteeism, whether students stayed home in the first place before they got to school. How many students presented symptoms in the school? It will be treated on a case by case basis," said Michael Eugene, Orange County Schools.

District spokesperson Dylan Thomas explained that schools are already successfully identifying cases that are treated like swine flu, even without medical confirmation.

"The schools are dealing with students who come and have been bad or getting a call from parents saying they're sick and staying home," Thomas said.

The 11 schools are scattered around the county and include kids in all age ranges. The schools involved are Lockhart Middle School, Shenandoah Elementary, Stone Lakes Elementary, Timber Creek High School, University High School, Timber Lakes Elementary, Wolf Lake Elementary, Oak Hill Elementary, Apopka Middle School, Maitland Middle School, and Apopka High School.

Areas where sick kids have been, such as school buses, are being carefully cleaned.

"If a school bus is identified that may have transported a student to school with flu-like symptoms that day, that bus would be removed from service for 24 hours while it is cleaned down," Thomas said.

Even with all the talk of keeping kids home with flu symptoms, only one child's parents kept them home out of the 12 schools. The rest were identified by school staff.

Eyewitness News learned the school district will not be keeping a running tally of suspected cases online where parents can find it. Instead, they're planning to notify parents on a case-by-case basis. School principals are communicating to parents about the swine flu issues by using letters or automated phone messages.
 
 
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This year I have scheduled my classes so as to have a few minutes between sessions, that I might have time to clean my student's tables and sink areas well.  I am also taking precautions so that they will have ample time to actually use soap and water.  Often it is simply a squirt in the hand of some sanitizer before they go to lunch--they do not always make the time for good hygiene in many school settings.  Our little school is small and we share a nurse with other schools--it's often up to the teacher to watch and be the first line of defense with any illness or potential health risk. Even with the garden variety flu, we lost a Kindergarten age child a couple of years back at a school not too far away from here.  We just recently lost a college age student at a nearby college to meningitis due to possible flu and secondary infection.  This thing could end up being far worse and I certainly worry as this new school year begins. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rickster58 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2009 at 3:37pm
We are 4 weeks into our school term. There was a great concern that with school resuming, the spread of swine flu would increase.  Fortunately, so far this has not eventuated, thanks in part to a set of protocols we introduced in our local area.
 
I am on the school council for the local primary school and over the holidays we equipped every classroom with a supply of Rely-On (Virkon) tablets, spray bottles and paper towels. We formulated a policy for cleaning desks and touchable surfaces between classes and with the older kids have made it part of their classroom maintenance.
 
We have found , even in the short time we have been doing this, that the older children have a raised awareness of infection control, are happy to maintain their personal spaces which means cleaner classrooms and as a bonus, we have noticed they are using roughly double the amount of hand sanitizer compared to last term, which means they are washing their hands more regularly!
 
It has been harder to educate the younger children and teachers have had to wear the load somewhat, but so far we have not had any illnesses.
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Littleraven Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2009 at 5:21pm
Rickster, This is great information.  It makes me feel that it will make a difference to implement as many of these types of precautions as possible and make them routine for the classroom, school, teachers and students.  We have a new principal in our school this year. I think that I will make suggestions for our school along the lines of the successful strategies which you all are using down there in beautiful Australia.
There's a Bad Moon on the Rise
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rickster58 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2009 at 6:58pm
Hi Littleraven,
 
Mind you, we did this off our own bat, our state and federal education authorities are way behind on infection control. Since we implemented our policies a number of other schools in our area have followed suite.
 
Sometimes you just have to take matters into your own hands, it is unfortunate but true, authorities have other priorities and agendas....but then so do we parents and protecting our children is our number one priority.
 
I would encourage all of you involved in public education not to wait for the authorities to tell you what to do, rather, be proactive and create your own infection control policies and implement them as soon as possible.
 
Rickster58
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Mary008 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2009 at 8:52pm
 
hi Rickster...   heard of the 20 yr old saved in Melbourne... wrote a bit on level 6...good job
 
...thank heaven for Australia's Biota. 
 
 
 
a little info..
 
Influenza Info for Schools
............................................
 
 
 
 
Mary008
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Medclinician Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2009 at 9:19pm
Originally posted by Mary008 Mary008 wrote:

 
It takes about 3 waves...  seering through populations at 3-4 month intervals, for the
 
virus to burn itself down to something less infective. 


This is odd. What happened to 'there are no waves in Pandemics'?

Also in previous epidemics- 1898 some waves lasted as long as 4 years- even the 1918 Pandemic was two years.

All the way back to the ancient times- these things have always had three waves. \

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Medclinician Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 26 2009 at 9:23pm
Originally posted by rickster58 rickster58 wrote:

We are 4 weeks into our school term. There was a great concern that with school resuming, the spread of swine flu would increase.  Fortunately, so far this has not eventuated, thanks in part to a set of protocols we introduced in our local area.
Rickster58


Hello again Rickster. What we have been seeing in the U.S. is that no way do they want to shut down school and in many memos have said they would not do so unless it was truly a disaster. Allowing the school session to begin when we have a highly infective 2nd wave coming may truly set things off. The 40% decrease in infection is probably pretty accurate.

It is all about money- and also taking care of kids. With this economy, mommy having to stay home if she is working would wipe many families out.

Its a wait and see in the U.S.

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