Texas Confirms First Resident Death From Flu

rockin'robin

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State health officials today confirmed the first death of a Texas resident due to swine flu.

Few details have been released but officials said the woman lived in Cameron County, along the U.S.-Mexico border, and had other, chronic health conditions.

The Texas Department of State Health Services said the woman died earlier this week.

Last week, a toddler boy from Mexico City died at a Houston hospital -- making him the first swine flu death in the U.S.

Meanwhile, U.S. health officials are no longer recommending that schools close if students come down with swine flu, the government said Tuesday.

Last week, schools were advised to shut down for about two weeks if there were suspected cases of swine flu. Hundreds of schools around the country have followed the government's guidance and closed schools, giving students an unexpected vacation and leaving parents scrambling for child care.

"We no longer feel that school closure is warranted," said Dr. Richard Besser, acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said the swine flu virus had turned out to be milder than feared and the government decided to change its advice. So far, the virus has not proved to be more infectious or deadly than the seasonal flu.

The CDC said parents should still make sure to keep sick children with flulike symptoms at home for seven days.

As the threat seemed to diminish, health officials also considered the problems the closings were creating for parents, Besser said. Officials were hearing about children getting dropped off at libraries, or parents who couldn't take sick leave to care for their children.

"The downsides of school closure start to outweigh the benefits," Besser said.

The change in guidance was made in consultation with the White House and other officials, Besser and others said.

An estimated 726 public and nonpublic schools were closed Tuesday for flu-related reasons, in 24 states and the District of Columbia, according to the Education Department. In total, these schools enroll approximately 468,000 students on a typical day. (There are more than 100,000 schools in the U.S., with about 55 million students.)

The number of confirmed swine flu cases in the United States is now over 400, with hundreds more probable cases.

Nearly two of every three cases are under the age of 18, CDC officials said.

Local school officials still have the ultimate say in whether to close or not, CDC officials noted.

In the new guidance, the CDC recommends that when children or school staff are sick, they stay home. Those who do go to school should practice good hygiene -- like coughing into their sleeve or shoulder instead of their hands or the air, and washing their hands well and often.

Texas Confirms First Resident Death From Flu - Health News Story - WJXT Jacksonville
 
Dropping children off at libraries and using the libraries as childcare? That is not right. If I ever see a parent drop off a small child at the library down the street and the child is there for quite a while I will call the CPS. Librarians are not paid to supervise children, they are paid to care of books, fine people for overdue books, and other tasks that is associated with being a librarian. They are not babysitters. It's like those parents who drop their children off at the arcade at the local mill and leave them there all day long so they could go to work and not have to pay for childcare on the days that the children are off from school or during the summer.

Children who are sick also should not be at childcare. They should stay HOME. Period. I think parents who try to keep their sick children in childcare should be slapped with a huge fine. They are making things worse by exposing their sick child to other healthy children.

As for not being able to get a sick day from work so they can stay home to care for the sick child - too bad. Stay home and take care of the child anyway, and do not even think about getting a babysitter because you do not want to make your babysitter sick. If I were a babysitter who was asked to care for a child that I did not know was sick with the swine flu I would report the parents to the health department and I would also tell every single babysitter in town to avoid the child's family as they obviously do not care about other people's health and is allowing the swine flu to be spread to other people.

We are responsible for making sure not to expose what we are sick with to other people no matter what. If I get sick with anything I STAY HOME, and if I go to the doctor I wear a mask. I do not go anywhere else except to the pharmacy if I am prescribed a medication, and even so I would wear a mask and keep a distance from other people.

I would be quite pissed off (and rightly so) if someone came to the bowling alley while sick and I got sick because of that person. It is not acceptable, and it should be against the law, punishable by a hefty fine like $1,000 dollars. I don't care if that is going overboard, but you don't like to be sick, do you? I sure don't!
 
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