Posted on 03/03/2003 7:46:20 AM PST by RCW2001
By Bradley Flory
Staff Writer
Parents began calling Frost Elementary School and the Jackson County Health Department as word spread of the death of 9-year-old Natalie H. Emmons.
They wanted to know one thing: Should we worry about our children?
Emmons, a fourth-grader at Frost, died Thursday after being sick with flu-like symptoms. She had a seizure and then cardiac arrest.
She is at least the eighth child in Michigan to die in the last month after a flu-like illness. Her death comes as Jackson County is at the peak of flu season.
"We don't want parents to panic, but we want them to be alert for signs of severe illness," said Geralyn Lasher, spokeswoman for the Michigan Department of Community Health.
"Key signs that you should seek medical attention are stiffness and soreness in the neck, very sudden and persistent headaches, sudden high fever, disorientation or difficulty breathing."
Seven cases of influenza are confirmed this year in Jackson County, said Ronald Grimes, head of the Health Department. Many more cases may be undiagnosed because the definitive test, a nasal swab, is rarely given.
Dr. John Maino, county medical examiner, said it will take several days to determine if Emmons had the flu.
Around the state, other suspicious deaths were reported in Washtenaw, Oakland, Kent and Newaygo counties, Lasher said. Three deaths were conclusively linked to influenza and the rest are still being studied.
"There is nothing to suggest that any of the Michigan cases are related to each other or any cases in other states, like Virginia," Lasher said.
"Sadly, this is not out of the ordinary."
Children and adults can increase their chances of staying healthy by taking good preventative measures, Lasher said. She advised getting plenty of rest, good nutrition, exercise and frequent and thorough hand-washing.
Grimes said it is not too late to get a flu shot, although few doses remain at the Health Department. It takes 10 to 15 days for the shot to do any good.
"Getting a shot won't protect you right now," he said. "It's not an immediate thing."
Emmons is survived by her parents, Sandra and Todd Emmons; two sisters, Alexandra and Dayna; and grandparents Richard and Evelyn Horn.
-- Reach reporter Bradley Flory at bflory@citpat.com or 768-4925.
Sounds out of the ordinary to me. Flu generally kills the elderly, infant, and chronically ill, not several otherwise healthy children in a particular area. Sounds like a bad bug.
CDC reacts to deaths with alert to officials
By STEVE STONE AND MICHELLE MIZAL-ARCHER , The Virginian-Pilot
© February 23, 2003
Last updated: 7:42 PM
Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta are alerting every state health agency to watch for child deaths similar to those that have occurred in recent weeks in Virginia, Michigan and Ohio.
So far, the CDC has received reports of at least 14 children nationally who have died suddenly after experiencing upper respiratory infections and fevers.
The alert is entirely routine, a CDC spokeswoman said Saturday. Local, state and federal officials said there is still no evidence that the cluster of deaths in such a short period represents anything other than a tragic coincidence.
From what we have learned so far, it does look like a viral-related situation, said Kathy Harben, a CDC spokeswoman in Atlanta. There are no known links between the patients, she said, noting the cases were still being evaluated.
In addition to the CDC alert, Virginias health department sent letters Friday asking physicians to notify state health officials of patients who have suffered from any unexplained or unusual illness.
By late Saturday afternoon, state health officials had no new information to report on the unusual deaths of five Virginia children four in Hampton Roads in four days. More information may become available Monday afternoon, said Trina Lee, a Virginia Department of Health spokeswoman.
Maria C. Carter, 2, of Portsmouth, may have suffered from an infection that moved to her heart, medical examiners said after an autopsy. Maria died Feb. 16. Seven-year-old Rachel Broome of Virginia Beach went home sick Monday with a cough and died Wednesday. Bianca Zelena Soria, 6, of Hampton, died the same day from what is believed to have been a viral infection.
At least one more child from Hampton Roads and one from Richmond have died after having similar symptoms, Lee said.
If the deaths prove to be simply an atypical result of a typical flu season, that should come as no surprise, Harben said: The flu situation is different every year.
All the children suffered symptoms common with viral or bacterial infections.
I understand that all parents will be concerned about their children, said Dr. Robert B. Stroube, the Virginia health commissioner. However, at this time of the year, many children have upper respiratory infections and flu, and at this point I have no reason to believe children are at an increased risk of serious illness.
The CDC probe includes seven deaths in Michigan between Jan. 25 and Feb. 3 and two in Ohio as well as the five last week in Virginia.
An additional case, the death of an 18-month-old Elizabeth City boy who died Thursday at Albemarle Regional Hospital, remains under investigation by North Carolina health officials.
The first death to catch the attention of public health officials came Jan. 25 when 14-year-old David Tripp of Ypsilanti, Mich., died suddenly after experiencing flu-like symptoms.
So far, only a few of the Michigan children who died have tested positive for influenza, state health officials said. But public health authorities suspect it may have been a factor in several of the deaths.
Because some of the children, including David Tripp, became ill so suddenly and died without having had flu sophisticated tissue-sample tests, which can take weeks to conduct and dont always provide definite answers.
Despite assurances of health officials, many Hampton Roads parents are still worried. Some continued to take their children to hospital emergency rooms Saturday, fearful that seemingly normal illnesses could be more sinister.
In 15 hours, from midnight Friday to 3 p.m. Saturday, doctors and nurses at Childrens Hospital of The Kings Daughters saw about 200 emergency-room patients, said Becky Ceraul, the hospitals spokesperson. Normally, in 24 hours, they handle 120.
Ceraul estimated a several hour wait for each patient. By Saturday evening, doctors and nurses were still tending to the patients. Extra doctors and nurses have been called to help. Ceraul expects patients to crowd the emergency room today as well.
Ann C. Keffer, spokeswoman for Sentara a Healthcare, said that emergency rooms at hospitals on Saturday had only seen a slight decrease in the number of patients, compared to Fridays heavy crowd. Sentara Healthcare officials also called in extra staff at their hospitals.
Were so busy that were having a hard time keeping numbers straight, Keffer said.
The CDCs Harben echoed the advice of state health officials that parents take simple precautions:
Children should wash their hands frequently with soap and warm water.
Parents should make sure that children cover their mouths when they cough.
Children who are ill should stay home from school until they are feeling better.
We advise parents to take the same precautions to protect their children that they would take to help prevent catching a cold, the flu, or any respiratory infection, said Suzanne Jenkins.
This happened to friends of ours a couple of years ago. Their three year old girl had a cold. Nothing unusual. Then it got worse. Went to a doctor. Don't know what, if anything, he prescribed, but nothing major was suspected yet. A day or two later, she was a lot worse. They went to the emergency room. The girl was hospitalized but died about 36 hours later. "A cold that went to the heart" was the explanation given.
Meanwhile, our little one routinely spiked fevers of 104 and 105 at that age. She's not been in that range lately, however.
We have come to take good health for granted. Once in awhile, we get a reminder that the bugs are still out there ....
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