MD

2009-09-09

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

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On campus, attendance an issue if swine flu spreads

By Stephanie Steinberg, Daily Staff Reporter
Published September 7, 2009

Getting sick is bad. Missing class can be worse.

But this year, the University is asking professors to be more flexible with sick students who skip class because of an illness, particularly those who get the H1N1 virus.

Dr. Robert Winfield, the University's chief medical officer, said students should not attend class if they have H1N1 so that they can't spread the virus and infect faculty and fellow students.

“We’re asking professors to be lenient about this,” Winfield said, adding that University Health Service will not write notes for those infected with H1N1 because doctors expect an overwhelming amount of students may catch the virus.

"We're indicating the Health Service can't give notes to everybody because we’ll be overwhelmed, and we really need to take care of the sick people," Winfield said.

Students who miss class because they are ill are advised to e-mail their professors and academic adviser to notify them of their absence.

Andrew Burchfield, manager of emergency planning for the University, said students have a personal responsibility to take care of themselves and follow the University’s request to self-isolate when ill.

“People need to make sure that they’re heeding the advice of ‘If you’re sick, stay home; Don’t go in and contaminate others because that’s the best way we’re going to stop the spread,” Burchfield said.

VIRAL ATTENTION

As it has developed this year, swine flu has proven to be more perilous for people under age 24 than the general public. Because the virus is a novel strain that first appeared in the United States in April 2009, very few people have any immunity to fight the virus.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that the virus has caused 593 deaths in the United States, while a report by the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology estimates that it could kill as many as 90,000 people this season. While approximately 1 million people have caught H1N1 since the strain developed, the council estimates that the virus could infect half the population in the United States, or about 150 million people.

Medical School Associate Professor Sandro Cinti said it is the highly affected age range that has university officials across the country scrambling to prepare.

“With this particular flu, the highest number of deaths have been among younger people between the ages of 25 to 34, so that’s always concerning,” he said.

Cinti, an expert in infectious diseases, said H1N1 is also receiving a lot of attention because it’s the first pandemic since 1968.

“It’s been over 40 years since we’ve had a pandemic,” Cinti said. “The reason pandemics are concerning is because what you have is the introduction of a completely new virus that nobody has ever seen.”

Cinti added that the H1N1 virus is dangerous because people have no immunity against it, and it has predominately affected younger generations.

SWINE FLU VS. SEASONAL FLU

Even though public health officials are comparing H1N1 to the seasonal flu, Cinti said H1N1 is more contagious than seasonal influenza because people have no immunity against it, but it is not any more deadly.

“It remains a very mild flu and most people are better and have fevers that have gone away after two to three days,” Cinti said.

Each year, more than 200,000 people are hospitalized in the United States for influenza. According to the CDC, approximately 9,079 people have been hospitalized for H1N1.

It is difficult to determine the exact amount of H1N1 cases in Washtenaw County because not everyone with the virus sees a doctor who reports the illness. However, the Michigan Department of Community Health has documented 111 confirmed and probable flu-like cases that appeared in the county as of Aug. 29. Ten people have died from the virus in Michigan.