Information
Your are here: Home >> Information >>Flu can be fatal
Hits:2599 2011-11-24
A recent study has found that previously healthy children hospitalised with flu were significantly more likely to die if they were also infected with MRSA, or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. The findings are important because MRSA, which can cause skin and internal infections, is a growing concern among healthy children.
MRSA “used to be seen only in hospitalised people or people who worked in health care facilities”, said Michael Cappello, a professor of paediatric infectious disease at Yale. “This is no longer the case.”
The study looked only at the most severe cases of flu in the United States during the 2009-10 H1N1 outbreak, children so sick they had to be hospitalised in intensive care. About 4,000 children end up in paediatric intensive care units each year because of flu, a small percentage of the millions of children who get flu each year.
“When you think about the whole population, and that pretty much everyone got the flu, for most it was a very mild illness,” said Adrienne G. Randolph, the lead author of the study and an associate professor of anaesthesia at Harvard. Still, she said, “there is a risk for death, and vaccination is still the most effective prevention strategy.”
The researchers had data on 838 boys and girls under 21 admitted to 35 paediatric intensive care units across the country. Almost three-quarters of the children had one or more chronic health conditions, including asthma, immunosuppression or neurological, cardiovascular and gastrointestinal illnesses. The rest had no health problems before their hospitalisation.
The median age of the children was 6 years, and 75 of them, or almost 9 per cent, died. Among the deaths were 18 of the 251 children who were previously healthy.
After controlling for other factors, researchers found that being female, having a pre-existing neurologic condition or being immune-compromised increased the risk of death. Flu infections of the brain or heart and co-infection with MRSA were also predictors of mortality for all children. Almost 9 per cent of the children studied were infected with Staphylococcus.
But in healthy children, only MRSA infection predicted death, and their relative risk of death was eight times as high as that of the uninfected. Of the previously healthy children who died, six were infected with MRSA and two with the more common strain of staph, S. aureus. The findings appeared in the journal Paediatrics.
“There’s a nice message here about vaccines: that even otherwise healthy children are still at risk, and they are at risk of death,” said Lisa Saiman, a professor of clinical paediatrics at Columbia. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends the flu vaccine for everyone over the age of 6 months, and stresses that pregnant women, children younger than two and people over 50 are at especially high risk of having serious flu-related complications.
“These findings provide further support for the recent recommendations by the C.D.C. to immunise all eligible people,” she said.
“Resistant organisms like MRSA are created in part by overuse of antibiotics, and treating mild infections like the common cold with antibiotics is creating more resistant organisms,” Randolph, the study author, added. “The message,” she said, is “get your kids vaccinated, and stop using all these antibiotics.”
- F.D.A and Dairy Industry Spar Over Testing of Milk 2011-11-05
- Food Safety 2011-11-05
- Food Safety After a Power Outage 2011-11-24
- Pepsi Challenged 2011-10-14
- Singleton Hospital to face review over E-coli deaths 2011-11-24
- Your Health: Super Staph 2011-11-24
News

Add:33 Tangkang Road, Yuhang District, Hangzhou City, China
Tel : +86-571-86578098
Fax : +86-571-81604276
E-mail : manager@hhmachine.cn
QQ:2355663251 Phone/Wechat/Whatsapp:
+86 15268116877

Skype: huihemachine
QQ:2355663252
MSN:huihemachine@outlook.com
