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April 27, 2009FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE EXPERT
ADVISES PRUDENCE IN LIGHT OF SWINE FLU
As the cases of swine flu increase in the United States and
around the world, here are observations and suggestions from Dr.
Robert Brooks. He’s associate dean for health affairs at the Florida
State University College of Medicine, an expert in infectious
diseases and former secretary of the Florida Department of Health:
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Be prudent, but don’t panic. Very few humans will have any
innate resistance to this strain of flu, he said, so expect the
number of cases to mount for a while. “My sense is this is just
the beginning of the epidemic,” Brooks said. “I think we’re
going to see more states added to the list” – including Florida,
which attracts people from all over the world. “Who knows how
many of the people from Mexico visited Disney World or other
Florida destinations?” he said. Brooks also wonders whether
spring break played a role in spreading swine flu from Mexico to
the U.S.
- Realize that the flu shot you got last winter won’t work on
this flu. But so far, at least in the United States, the
mortality rate is low, and the disease has responded to the
anti-viral drugs Tamiflu and Relenza. That’s encouraging, Brooks
said, noting that the Centers for Disease Control has started to
release its stockpile of those medicines and other supplies to
the states.
- Be aware of CDC and World Health Organization travel
restrictions. Plus, use common sense. If your immune system is
not 100-percent, reconsider that cross-country trip to your
class reunion in a city with known or suspected cases.
- Wash your hands a lot, or use hand sanitizer. If someone who
has swine flu coughs into his hand just before he touches a
doorknob and then you touch it, your chances of getting the
disease are pretty good.
- If you develop flu-like systems, get to the doctor soon,
just in case. Practice “social isolation”: That is, as much as
possible stay away from other people you might infect. (At the
College of Medicine, that particularly applies to students and
faculty who are seeing patients; you don’t want to infect them.)
If you have the flu, prepare to stay at home for at least seven
days. To minimize the risk to others in your household, try to
quarantine yourself in one room and have your own bathroom and
personal supplies.
- Be glad that preparations for a possible flu pandemic have
been in the works, mostly as a result of concerns over bird flu.
“This new strain of swine flu is going to test our pan-influenza
preparedness plan,” Brooks said. But “we’re a lot better
prepared than we were a few years ago because of the bird-flu
planning.”
- Get good, reliable information. One excellent source Brooks
recommends is
http://www.cdc.gov/swineflu. Bookmark it.
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