Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: flu + children + more  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

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News 10 Now
Flu study confirms recommendations for kids
Capital News 9, NY -
Children who receive all recommended flu vaccine doses are less likely to catch the respiratory virus that the Center for Disease Control estimates ...
University of Rochester Medical Center to begin HIV study Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
all 3 news articles »  ROCM
Study links asthma rate to birth month
Boston Globe, United States -
By Leigh Hopper Oberholzer Babies born four months before the peak of cold and flu season - in other words, roughly now - are 30 percent more likely to ...
Flu vaccinations still available for kids, adults
Shakopee Valley News, MN - 8 minutes ago
Starting this season, the recommendation for influenza vaccination for children was changed. All children between the ages of 6 months and 18 years are ...
CMC offers tips to prevent RSV infection
Register-Herald, OH -
The flu can be more serious for children of all ages, and its season lasts from January to February. There also is a vaccine to help prevent children from ...
It's time again to get yearly flu vaccine
El Paso Times, TX -
According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 200000 people -- including 20000 children 5 and younger -- who are infected ...
Doctors Abandoning Vaccines That Don't Make Them Money
Natural News.com, AZ -
That's what children are given these days. It's not 130 individual shots; it's 130 total vaccines combined into fewer shots (each shot contains more than ...
New record set in mass dispensing exercise
Heber Springs Sun-Times, AR -
Children six months through five years of age should receive the flu vaccine due to the increased probability of severe illness in this age group. ...
Flu Shots: Health care workers must step up to protect patients
The Post-Standard - Syracuse.com, NY -
He especially urged the most vulnerable groups to get vaccinated: children ages 6 months to 18; anyone over 50; people with chronic health conditions; ...
Who will take care of the babies? The Post-Standard - Syracuse.com
all 2 news articles »
Ruth's House looking for kids' winter clothing
Eagle Tribune, MA -
Donations may be dropped off Thursday, 10 am to 5 pm; Friday, 9 am to 3 pm; and Saturday, 9 am to 2 pm A flu shot clinic will be held tomorrow, ...
Pharmacies are Prepared for Flu Season
WBKO, KY -
"We are not doing young children flu shots here, but I do encourage young children to get those especially with asthma." If do get the flu, pharmacists say ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: flu + children + more  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


ITV.com
Vaccinating all children under 16 could cut flu cases 'by up to 97 ...
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom -
Professor Steve Field, chairman of the Royal College of General Practitioners, said that vaccinating young children could be beneficial but that more ...
Flu jabs for under-fives could reduce all infections by two-thirds Independent
Call for flu jab for under-fives ITV.com
Child flu jabs 'protect everyone' BBC News
News-Medical.net - Metro
all 194 news articles »
MedImmune ships Flu-Mists for winter
Bizjournals.com, NC -
The Gaithersburg subsidiary of London-based AstraZeneca PLC (NYSE: AZN) said it is shipping 12 million doses for the 2008-2009 flu season, more than in ...
FluMist(R) Now Available for the 2008-2009 Flu Season CNNMoney.com (press release)
all 11 news articles »
Cold-fX safe for kids: maker
Calgary Herald,  Canada -
... is clearly a demonstrated need for safe and effective products to treat cold and flu in children, who suffer from these ailments much more than adults. ...
Top Pediatrics Journal Publishes Positive Safety Results of First ... Market Wire (press release)
Canadian study of colds and kids: Positive safety results for ... EurekAlert (press release)
Phthalates: Are the chemicals that make plastic bendy a health hazard? CBC.ca
all 17 news articles »

Manx Radio
Flu jabs for under-5s would be ?impossible to manage?
Essex Echo, UK -
In 2005 the committee advised more work needed to be done before flu immunisation in children could be considered. Dr Nanjit Siani, of the Westcliff Surgery ...
Click to join MR+ Manx Radio
all 2 news articles »

Wall Street Journal
For the Meningococcal Vaccine
Wall Street Journal -
A healthy teenager comes down with what seems like the flu, then gets rapidly weaker, spikes a high fever, starts vomiting and breaks out in a rash. ...
Bacteria, not influenza, were real killers in 1918 flu pandemic
Thaindian.com, Thailand -
Jonathan McCullers, an expert on influenza-bacteria co-infections at St Jude Children??s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, said that this is not to ...
Ginseng Safe for Short-Term Pediatric Use
MedPage Today, NJ -
4 -- Ginseng appears safe for treating children with cold and flu symptoms, researchers here found. Explain to interested patients that the study looked ...
Ginseng Given Go-Ahead to Treat Kids
Keep the Doctor Away, UK - Aug 4, 2008
New findings have confirmed that botanical extract ginseng is a safe cold and flu remedy for kids. The Canadian study found that giving children 3-day doses ...
MURRIETA: Numbing the pain
North County Times, CA -
MORE INFORMATION: Ticket prices are $225 for adults and free for children 12 years old and younger. For more information, call (951) 926-4770 or visit ...

BBC News
Health Buzz: An Exercise Pill and Other Health News
U.S. News & World Report, DC - Aug 1, 2008
Older, frail people are more likely to get the flu even if they've gotten the vaccine?and once they get sick, they're more susceptible to complications like ...
Flu Vaccine Ineffective in Some Seniors but Still Worth Having eFluxMedia
all 94 news articles »
Source: Google News

[CITATION] Effectiveness of Influenza Vaccination of Day Care Children in Reducing Influenza-Related Morbidity … -
ES Hurwitz, M Haber, A Chang, T Shope, S Teo, M … - JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 2000 - JAMA
... For household contacts of these children with serologic evidence of influenza
A(H3N2) or B infection, there was more than a 60% reduction in febrile ...

Prevention and control of influenza. Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization … -
CB Bridges, K Fukuda, TM Uyeki, NJ Cox, JA … - MMWR Recomm Rep, 2003 - Mass Med Soc
... The rationale for this more proactive approach comes from two studies in which children
younger than ... be at increased risk for influenza-related hospitalization ...

Oral oseltamivir treatment of influenza in children. -
RJ WHITLEY, FG HAYDEN, KS REISINGER, N YOUNG, R … - The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 2001 - pidj.org
... contacts. 3 Otitis media is a common sequela of influenza infection in
children, occurring in 20% or more of those =6 years. 4 ...

Predictors of Influenza Virus Vaccination Status in Hospitalized Children -
KA Poehling, T Speroff, RS Dittus, MR Griffin, GB … - Pediatrics, 2001 - Am Acad Pediatrics
... et al 15 reported that mothers who are very worried about their child?s asthma are
more likely to vaccinate their children for influenza after receiving a ...

Prevention and control of influenza: recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization … -
NM Smith, JS Bresee, DK Shay, TM Uyeki, NJ Cox, RA … - MMWR Recomm Rep, 2006 - archives.hellis.org
... the importance of administering 2 doses of influenza vaccine for children aged 6 ...
expanding outreach and infrastructure to vaccinate more persons than ...

Avian Influenza Virus Infection of Children in Vietnam and Thailand. -
C Grose - The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 2004 - pidj.org
... across the world and entered North America in Fall 2003, seemed to be more virulent
and caused >100 deaths in children during the 2003-2004 influenza season. ...

The Underrecognized Burden of Influenza in Young Children -
KA Poehling, KM Edwards, GA Weinberg, P Szilagyi, … - New England Journal of Medicine, 2006 - content.nejm.org
... Children with influenza and children without influenza had similar characteristics
(Table 1) except that influenza was detected more often in older children. ...

[PDF] Clinical features and rapid viral diagnosis of human disease associated with avian influenza A H5N1 … -
KY Yuen, PK Chan, M Peiris, DN Tsang, TL Que, KF … - Lancet, 1998 - birdflubook.com
... Gastrointestinal symptoms are not unusual in children with H1N1 ... older patients with
complications is more surprising ... in adults during the 1957 influenza A (H2N2 ...
-

… of Outpatient Visits and Hospitalizations Related to Influenza in Infants and Young Children -
MA O'Brien, TM Uyeki, DK Shay, WW Thompson, K … - Pediatrics, 2004 - Am Acad Pediatrics
... 10,11. Improving our understanding of the cost-effectiveness of influenza vaccination
for children will require more data on the rates of outpatient visits ...

Administration of influenza vaccine to patients with egg allergy -
JM James? - J Pediatr, 1998 - Mass Med Soc
... Comment: Egg protein content in flu vaccine varies by ... allergies receive vaccine that
has no more than 1.2 ... protocol, appears to be safe for allergic children. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Far More Children Afflicted With Flu

July 6, 2006 04:03:13 PM PST
By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, July 6 (HealthDay News) -- Many more young children than previously thought are stricken with the flu each year, a new U.S. study finds. And researchers say doctors often fail to diagnose the illness, increasing the likelihood that children are spreading the disease.

"The burden of influenza was very high" among young children, said Dr. Katherine Poehling, lead author of the report and assistant professor of pediatrics at Vanderbilt Children's Hospital in Nashville, Tenn.

The findings are a good argument for making sure children in this age group get vaccinated against seasonal flu. "Vaccination has been shown to decrease infection rates and severity of the illness as well as the ability of patients to transmit the virus," said Dr. Michael Marcus, director of pediatric pulmonology/allergy at Maimonides Medical Center in New York City. "For all three reasons, vaccination is a good thing."

Results of the study were first reported to the federal Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) in February, and formed the basis for new recommendations that children six months to five years of age be inoculated for the flu every year. The prior ACIP recommendation, made in 2004, was that all children aged six to 23 months receive the annual influenza vaccine.

Yet, drawing on data from 2000 to 2004, the study authors found that doctors often failed to recognize flu in young children. A correct diagnosis was only given 28 percent of the time to pediatric patients hospitalized with the disease, and just 17 percent of the time to outpatients, the researchers said.

More than one-third -- 35 percent -- of the children studied visited a doctor or clinic within two days of the onset of the flu, meaning antiviral medication may have been useful.

Dr. Jonathan McCullers, assistant member in the department of infectious diseases at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., said the study findings are "really, really good support for what the ACIP is doing. Eventually we think they are going to push for all kids [to be vaccinated] and I really applaud this because the burden of the disease is huge."

Until 2002, annual flu shots were recommended only for children older than six months when they had certain co-existing conditions.

"We would like for doctors to do the tests and give the children antivirals so we don't have those hospitalizations and bad outcomes," McCullers said.

Marcus added: "These children not only get sick from influenza but spread it to other children and to adults, to parents, grandparents, babysitters. They are an important vector for influenza to spread to the rest of population."

According to the study authors, rates of hospitalization and outpatient visits for influenza in young children had not been well documented.

For the study, the researchers looked at children younger than 5 years of age in three U.S. counties who had visited a doctor for an acute respiratory tract infection or fever. Nasal and throat swabs were tested for the flu virus and parents were asked whether their child had been vaccinated. Children who were hospitalized between 2000 and 2004 were also followed.

The study, appearing in the July 6 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, is one of the first to look at this data prospectively, rather than relying on backdated records. This makes the findings particularly robust, McCullers said.

The authors calculated that the average annual rates of hospitalization for influenza were 4.5 per 1,000 children aged 0 to 5 months of age; 0.9 per 1,000 children 6 months to 23 months of age; and 0.3 per 1,000 children 24 to 59 months of age.

The authors also discovered that 50 clinic visits and six emergency-department visits per 1,000 children were attributable to the flu during the 2002-03 flu season, as were 95 clinic visits and 27 emergency-room visits per 1,000 children during the 2003-04 season.

The authors concluded that pediatric outpatient visits due to the flu were 10 to 250 times more frequent than hospitalizations, and "few influenza infections were recognized clinically."

More information

For more information on the flu and the flu vaccine, visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 
 
 
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Health Highlights: July 6, 2006

July 6, 2006 04:03:13 PM PST

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

Florida Supreme Court Rejects Record Tobacco Verdict

Florida's Supreme Court has rejected a $145 billion verdict against tobacco companies -- the most damages ever awarded by an American jury.

Calling the verdict "excessive," the justices approved an appellate court ruling that it had been a mistake to certify a class-action lawsuit representing some 300,000 to 700,000 ill Floridians. Certification led to the award for damages in 2000, the Associated Press reported Thursday.

The justices did, however, reinstated damages to two cancer-stricken smokers, $2.85 million to Mary Farnan and $4.023 million to Angie Della Vecchia, who brought the original suit. A third award for $5.8 million to another smoker, Frank Amodeo, was not restored in Thursday's ruling, the AP said.

The lawsuit, accusing the tobacco industry of misleading people about the dangers of smoking, was filed in 1994 and led by a pediatrician, Dr. Howard Engle. The husband-and-wife legal team of Stanley and Susan Rosenblatt, who filed the suit in Miami, declined immediate comment Thursday, according to AP.

John R. Seffrin, chief executive officer of the American Cancer Society, called the court's decision a "huge disappointment."

"Despite the legal complexities behind today's ruling, one thing remains certain -- tobacco is the leading cause of preventable death in this country and the companies producing these deadly agents continue to do so at the expense of the health and well being of this nation," he said.

-----

Decline in Youth Smoking Stalls: Report

Cigarette use among America's high school students was unchanged from 2003 to 2005, suggesting that the national decline in youth smoking observed in the six years prior might have stalled, according to U.S. figures released Thursday.

In its weekly Morbidity and Mortality Report, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 23 percent of high school students were current smokers, down from 36.4 percent in 1997. The national health objective for 2010 is to reduce current smoking rates among high school students to 16 percent or less.

Factors likely contributing to the lack of continued decline include smaller annual increases in retail cigarette prices during 2003-05; potentially less exposure or availability among youths to mass media smoking-prevention campaigns; less funding for comprehensive statewide tobacco-use prevention programs; and substantial increases in tobacco industry expenditures on advertising and promotion in the United States, from $5.7 billion in 1997 to $15.2 billion in 2003, the report said.

The report also said that after decades of decline, smoking in movies, which has been linked to youth smoking, increased rapidly beginning in the early 1990s and by 2002 was at levels seen back in 1950.

-----

Mental Disorders, Partner Strife Top Causes of Violent Deaths

Mental-health disorders, intimate partner conflicts and felony-related crimes were the leading contributing factors to suicides and homicides in seven U.S. states during 2003 and 2004, a study released Thursday found.

Intimate partner violence and felony-related crimes were key causes of homicides during the period, while mental-health problems and partner conflicts played the largest role in suicides, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS).

The statistics for suicide and homicide rates showed a decrease of 6.2 percent and 8.9 percent, respectively. The causative findings are expected to be used to develop prevention strategies to reduce the number of violent deaths nationwide, the report said.

-----

Pre-Surgery Chemotherapy Helps Stomach Cancer Patients

Stomach cancer patients who receive chemotherapy both before and after surgery live longer, British researchers report.

The study, published in the July 6 New England Journal of Medicine, said the results provide a new treatment option for operable stomach cancer. Chemotherapy cut the risk of death by one-quarter, compared to surgery alone, and also shrank tumors and improved survival without a return of cancer, the Associated Press reported.

Conducted primarily in Britain, the study followed 503 patients who received chemotherapy before and after surgery for stomach cancer or cancer of the esophagus. A five-year follow-up found that 36 percent of those who got chemotherapy were still alive, compared to 23 percent of those who only had surgery.

Surgery is the standard treatment for stomach cancer, with all or part of the stomach removed. In the United States, about 22,300 new cases of stomach cancer are expected to be diagnosed this year, and about 11,400 people will die of the disease, AP said.

-----

Back-Pain Sufferers Would Give Up Sex for Relief: Study

More than half the respondents in a national survey of lower back-pain sufferers said they would abstain from sex for six months if it meant finding relief.

Conducted by the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians (ASIPP) and medical technology manufacturer Smith & Nephew, the survey also found that one-third of those questioned said work, personal relationships and quality of life were severely affected by their back pain.

Among other findings released Thursday by ASIPP:

  • 60 percent said lower back pain severely or substantially limited their everyday activities, including picking up their children and grandchildren.
  • On average, respondents reported missing more than one day of work per week, or up to nearly two months per year due to back pain.
  • 48 percent waited three months or longer to seek medical attention for their lower back pain.
  • 65 percent were willing to give up dessert for a year, 54 percent undergo root canal, 41 percent give birth or 37 percent go skydiving if it meant no more back pain.

In addition, many respondents said they had already given up activities because of their back pain, with 72 percent eliminating exercise or sports-related activities, and 46 percent reporting having given up sex.

 

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