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Ebony Bennett, right, from
Jersey City, New Jersey, holds her son Jayden Carroll, 1, at
the Greyhound Bus Station in Washington, on Tuesday, Nov.
24, 2009, while waiting to board a bus to North Carolina to
visit her father for Thanksgiving. "I'm not too worried
about us getting the flu while traveling," says Bennett,
"[Jayden] had a flu shot so hopefully we'll be ok." (AP
Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) |
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Holiday
season
could
bring
more
swine
flu
By MIKE
STOBBE
AP
Medical
Writer
Let us
give
thanks —
and pass
the
Purell.
Your
family
might be
sharing
more
than
turkey
and
pumpkin
pie this
Thanksgiving.
Swine
flu may
also be
on the
table —
and at
crowded
airports
and
shopping
malls.
Just as
the
pandemic
seems to
be
waning
around
the
country,
some
health
officials
are
worried
that
holiday
gatherings
could
lead to
more
infections.
So the
government
has
launched
a new
travel-health
campaign.
"It's
important
to
remember
the
things
that
everybody
can do
to stay
healthy,"
said Dr.
Beth
Bell of
the
Centers
for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention.
Thanksgiving
is
typically
followed
by at
least a
modest
bump in
early
seasonal
flu
cases,
according
to
reports
from the
past few
years.
But
this, of
course,
is not a
typical
year.
Swine
flu is a
new
virus
that
accounts
for
nearly
all flu
cases
right
now.
Despite
weeks of
declining
infections,
health
officials
are
staying
vigilant.
The
federal
government
is
putting
up
posters
in
airports,
seaports
and
border
crossings
in time
for
Thanksgiving.
The
campaign
also
includes
advertisements
with
slogans
such as
"Stop,
Wash &
Go."
The CDC
urges
people
to
travel
only if
they are
well,
get
vaccinated
against
swine
and
seasonal
flu,
wash
their
hands
often,
and
cover
coughs
and
sneezes
with a
tissue
or
sleeve.
Some 33
million
Americans
are
expected
to hit
the
nation's
highways
over the
Thanksgiving
holiday,
a slight
increase
from
last
year.
About
2.3
million
more
will
travel
by
airplane.
The
elbow-to-elbow
conditions
expected
on many
flights
may pose
more of
an
infection
threat
than a
runny-nosed
tike at
the
other
end of a
Thanksgiving
dinner
table.
One CDC
official
even
suggested
asking
that a
sick
passenger
be moved
to
another
part of
a plane.
But
that's
not
likely
to
happen
on a
crowded
airliner
or bus,
and it
isn't
much of
a
solution
anyway,
said a
few
people
waiting
at
Atlanta's
downtown
Greyhound
station
on
Tuesday
morning.
"That's
just
putting
it next
to
somebody
else,"
said
Judd
Nelson,
39,
waiting
to start
a
two-day
bus trip
to
Phoenix.
Nelson
had not
been
vaccinated
against
swine
flu, and
he did
not have
any hand
sanitizer.
He was
resigned
to his
fate if
someone
with
swine
flu
happens
to be
aboard
his bus.
"The way
I look
at it
is, if I
get it,
I'm
going to
get it
no
matter
what,"
he said.
Swine
flu has
sickened
an
estimated
22
million
Americans,
hospitalized
about
98,000
and
killed
4,000
since it
was
first
identified
last
April.
It is
similar
to
seasonal
flu but
poses a
much
bigger
threat
to
children
and
young
adults.
Usually,
seasonal
flu is
just
getting
going in
late
November,
and
holiday
get-togethers
allow
illness
to jump
from
small
pockets
to other
parts of
the
country.
Swine
flu, in
contrast,
has been
widespread
for
months.
"It's
not like
we
expect
to see a
bunch of
infected
people
going to
uninfected
cities
and
towns,"
said
Andrew
Pekosz,
a flu
expert
at Johns
Hopkins
University.
The
swine
flu
pandemic
hit in
two
waves:
first in
the
spring,
then a
larger
wave
that
started
in the
late
summer.
For the
past
three
weeks,
fewer
states
have
been
reporting
widespread
cases.
School
closings
have
dropped
to the
point
that
there
were
none on
Monday —
the
first
time
that's
happened
since
late
August —
though
there
were six
on
Tuesday,
according
to the
U.S.
Department
of
Education.
But
there
are
still
plenty
of ill
people —
as many
as
during
the peak
of many
regular
flu
seasons,
CDC
officials
say.
Indeed,
disease
trackers
are
quick to
say that
flu is
unpredictable.
A
variety
of
things
could
happen,
including
a third
wave or
a
mutation
that
could
make the
virus
more
deadly
or less
susceptible
to
medicines.
"We
really
don't
know
what the
trajectory
is going
to be,"
said
Bell, a
CDC
epidemiologist
who has
been a
leader
in the
agency's
swine
flu
response.
Seasonal
flu
usually
emerges
at this
time of
year,
but some
experts
think
swine
flu will
muscle
aside
the
seasonal
viruses.
That
probably
will not
be known
until
next
month,
said Dr.
Richard
Whitley,
an
infectious
diseases
specialist
at the
University
of
Alabama
at
Birmingham.
At New
York's
Pennsylvania
Station,
Katie
Almroth
was
waiting
to board
a train
Tuesday
with her
11-month-old
daughter
Anna,
who's
been
vaccinated
for
seasonal
flu but
not for
swine
flu.
They
were
headed
to
Harrisburg,
Pa., to
visit
relatives
for
Thanksgiving.
The
33-year-old
nurse
from
Jersey
City,
N.J.,
said she
was not
worried
about
traveling
during
the
swine
flu
pandemic,
but felt
more
comfortable
on a
train
than an
airplane
with her
daughter.
"I must
admit I
did
bring
little
wipes
along,"
said
Almroth,
showing
the
antiseptic
wipes
she had
tossed
in her
bag with
small
bottles
of hand
sanitizer.
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