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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Sat Oct 10, 2009 6:49 pm 
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Posts: 136
Health Officials: H1N1 Most Likely Cause of Flu-Like Illness Outbreak in Several Wood Co. Schools
Officials confirm that swine flu is most likely causing an outbreak of flu-like illness in several schools in Wood County.

The Mid-Ohio Valley Health Department's Regional Epidemiologist Sherif Ibrahim said most of the flu cases sent to the state lab have been confirmed as the H1N1 virus.

Ibrahim said there are several positive cases of swine flu but he is not releasing the number of people who have it.

In order to confirm an outbreak Ibrahim said 10 to 15 cases need to be confirmed.

Ibrahim said that the H1N1 virus is the only strain of flu in the area that has been confirmed by the state lab.

Officials are not releasing the names of the schools the people attend.

Also at the state level, Ibrahim said West Virginia is reporting higher flu activity. There are apparently three levels of flu activity- sporadic, regional, and widespread. At this time Ibrahim said the state is at the regional level.

The health department and the Wood County Board of Education are monitoring the outbreak and are asking parents to take these precautions:

1- Vaccinate your children against seasonal flu and H1N1 flu once vaccine is available.
2- Keep your children at home if they are feeling sick.
3- Send your children to school after they do not have a fever for 24 hours without using fever-reducing medications.
4- Wash your hands often with soap and water, cover your nose and mouth when you cough or sneeze, avoid touching your eyes, nose, or mouth and teach your children to take the same actions.
5- Stay tuned for up-to-date information from your health officials.
http://www.wtap.com/home/headlines/63933377.html


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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Tue Oct 13, 2009 10:51 am 
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Joined: Mon Aug 24, 2009 8:52 am
Posts: 1208
Quote:
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- The Cabell-Huntington Health department says a 4th person has died of Swine Flu (H1N1) in Cabell County.

The agency tells WSAZ.com the person is a 39-year-old woman, but they are not releasing her name or any other information.



However, family members tell WSAZ.com that the 4th victim is Deanna McNeely of Milton. They say she died last Thursday at Cabell-Huntington Hospital. They also say she had epilepsy.

The three previous deaths were 14-year-old Patrick Wheeler, 37-year-old Amy Scott, and 51-year-old Michael Bloomfield.

http://www.wsaz.com/news/headlines/64080297.html


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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Fri Oct 16, 2009 7:00 pm 
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Posts: 136
One Confirmed H1N1 Death in MOV
WTAP News
There is now one confirmed H1N1 related death in the Mid-Ohio Valley.
Posted: 5:17 PM Oct 16, 2009
Reporter: WTAP News
Email Address: news@wtap.com

There is now one confirmed H1N1 related death in the Mid-Ohio Valley.

Health officials with the Mid-Ohio Valley Health Department have confirmed that there has been a case of H1N1 related death in Wood County.

The patient was pregnant and the cause of death is attributed to complications associated with H1N1 Influenza.

The Mid-Ohio Valley Health Department has not released the name of the victim







http://www.wtap.com/home/headlines/64585257.html


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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 9:00 am 
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Posts: 136
Gilmer Co. Schools Closed Thursday Due to Absences
WTAP News
Gilmer County Schools closed its doors Thursday due to reports of flu-like symptoms and a high number of absences this week.
Reporter: Leslie Barrett
Email Address: leslie.barrett@wtap.com


Story 0 Comments Font Size: Gilmer County Schools were closed Thursday because of a high number of absences this week.

Superintendent John Bennett said more than 55% of high school students and about 20% of the staff were out Wednesday.

Bennett said Friday is a regularly scheduled Instructional Support Enhancement day which is only required for teachers to attend.

He decided to cancel classes Thursday to give students four days to recover.

Bennett said a health department survey showed that out of the 60%absent only about a quarter of the students had flu-like symptoms.
http://www.wtap.com/home/headlines/65752282.html


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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Fri Oct 23, 2009 7:42 pm 
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Posts: 136
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- The Cabell County Sheriff’s Office says a Huntington woman has been arrested for stealing a vial of swine flu vaccine during a vaccination clinic on Thursday.

They say the theft happened at the Health Department’s clinic at the New Baptist Church.



Deputies arrested 25-year-old Elizabeth Wilson of Huntington.

Chief Deputy Doug Ferguson, who was at the clinic, tells WSAZ.com that the vial of the swine flu vaccine was found in Wilson’s purse.

Ferguson, says he confronted Wilson after a health department employee told him that Wilson was trying to steal several syringes.

Ferguson says Wilson was at the clinic to get her three children vaccinated.

He says Wilson told him she took the vaccine because it wasn't available for her age group at Thursday's clinic.

Wilson is charged with petit larceny. She is currently in the Western Regional Jail.

Ferguson says the children are now in the care of Wilson’s mom who was with her daughter at the clinic.

http://www.wsaz.com/news/headlines/65785422.html


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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Sat Oct 24, 2009 9:28 am 
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Posts: 136
Wood County Shool Officals have been notifying all school age childrens homes to alert them to a H1N1 vacination shortage. All school age children were to be offered the vaccination on Monday 10/26. With the shortage school age children under the age of 8 years will be offered the vacine first. The rest of the children will be required to wait until sometime in November when the next scheduled shipment will arrive.


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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Mon Oct 26, 2009 6:09 pm 
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http://www.statejournal.com/story.cfm?f ... ryid=69177

Quote:
A Morgantown High School student, 17 year old Misty Cricks, died Sunday afternoon, as doctors treated her for the H1N1 swine flu virus. She had another condition that weakened her immune system, and she was hospitalized more than a week ago.
Officials at Morgantown High did not wish to comment Monday, as it was a painful day for students there.


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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Wed Oct 28, 2009 6:50 pm 
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I for one am outraged the the public debt would be placed ahead of our children. I dont care how many doses they were alloted. And just how was this a Normal scheduled shipment. Big Brother taking care of its own first again.I agree with health care , first responders, even pregnant women should be first in line But Not Government employees that compute money transactions for the banks.

Public Debt gets H1N1 vaccine early
Employees received shots a week before health department

By JODY MURPHY jmurphy@newsandsentinel.com
POSTED: October 28, 2009 Save | Print | Email | Read comments | Post a comment Email: "Public Debt gets H1N1 vaccine early"
*To: <--TO Email REQUIRED!
*From: <--FROM Email REQUIRED!


PARKERSBURG - Some employees at the Bureau of Public Debt received H1N1 vaccinations more than a week before they were offered to residents in the high-risk target groups by the Mid-Ohio Valley Health Department.

Lateefah Thompson, a public affairs specialist for Public Debt, said the bureau received a "small amount of doses" of the swine flu vaccine as part of a normal shipment from U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Thompson said the doses were distributed Oct. 15 to employees who were in the target group category.

Public Debt received its shipment a week before the Mid-Ohio Valley Health Department had hundreds standing in line on Friday to receive a limited number of vaccinations. Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital and St. Joseph's Hospital got the first batches of the vaccines for employees around Oct. 7.

Because of the shortage of the vaccine, Wood County Schools last week announced students 10 years or older would have to wait to receive vaccinations.

Dr. Kelly Fluharty, a family practice physician at Mid-Ohio Valley Medical Group in Vienna, was among those who stood in the cold rain last week to have her child vaccinated. She was upset Public Debt employees received the vaccines.

"It is wrong," Fluharty said. "The health department barely had enough to cover their high-risk population. Wood County schools ran out of the vaccine and was unable to immunize all the kids that went to its clinic.

"It is concerning to me why the government is deciding and rationing out the vaccines and what criteria it is using," Fluharty said.

Thompson said the vaccines were "mainly for pregnant women."

The target group also included:

•Persons who live with or provide care for infants age six months (such as parents, siblings and day-care providers).
•Persons age 25-64 years who have medical conditions that put them at higher risk for influenza-related complications.
•Health-care and emergency medical services personnel.
•Persons age 6 months-24 years.
"Our health unit put in an order request to the Department of Health and Human Services and we received the doses on the 15th (of October)," Thompson said in an e-mail. She directed questions on specific information pertaining to the distribution of the vaccine to health and human services.

Calls to the federal agency were referred to Gretchen Michaels, who is out of town, and to the Centers for Disease Control. Owen Grant, CDC spokesman, said they do not document county-level distribution.

Dick Wittberg, executive director of the Mid-Ohio Valley Health Department, took a diplomatic stance on the Public Debt vaccinations.

"I don't necessarily always agree with decisions that get made, but that doesn't make me right or them wrong," he said. "In my mind, the people that take precedent are the very young and pregnant."

Tammy Crookshanks, a family nurse practitioner and clinical manager at Mid-Ohio Valley Medical Group, said she was frustrated with the situation.

"We are frustrated as health-care providers that we can't offer it to our patients or employees," she said.

Crookshanks said they are seeing swine flu patients on a daily basis.

"We are telling patients to check with the health department. At this point, we don't know if we will receive the vaccinations at all in the near future," she said.

Fluharty said to her knowledge none of the local practitioners in the area have received vials of the H1N1 vaccine.

Only a handful of employees at Mid-Ohio Valley Medical have been vaccinated for H1N1 and several employees are or have been sick with the swine flu.

"I think what they did was inappropriate and it concerns me if this is the way things are going to be from now on if the government is getting into health care," she said.

http://www.newsandsentinel.com/page/con ... ntNum49083


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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 9:54 am 
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Joined: Fri Oct 02, 2009 5:46 pm
Posts: 136
Are We ready for round 2 :confused:

PARKERSBURG - Attendance numbers for Wood County Schools continue to rebound, in part due to a long weekend that gave students time to rest and recover.

Sue Woodward, spokeswoman for Wood County Schools, said schools continue to see students returning to the classroom. On Oct. 23, about 2,415 of the district's 13,500 students were absent. Schools were closed Monday to allow for parent-teacher conferences, and on Tuesday the number of students absent dropped to 1,873.

"The long weekend definitely helped," Woodward said.

By Wednesday the number dropped further to 1,693. Most schools saw their absences dip, with only a handful reporting an increase, Woodward said.

"It seems to be steady or down rather than up at most schools," Woodward said.

Rough numbers for Thursday showed about 1,052 students absent, but did not include attendance numbers for Parkersburg High School. Officials said they estimate about 150 students to be absent from PHS on Thursday, placing the total for the district somewhere around 1,200.

Chris Rutherford, attendance director for Wood County Schools, said the number of students requesting homebound instruction has not increased during the recent bout of flu and other illnesses which has moved through area schools. Homebound instruction is usually requested if a student has to be out of school for three weeks or more.

"They have to have a doctor's excuse and a plan of action from a doctor," he said. "We haven't seen a marked increase in requests. You may get two or three some weeks, but it's been minimal."

Teresa Bayer, director of health services for Wood County Schools, said nurses are no longer tracking student illness on a daily basis, but rather have reverted to weekly reports.

"We were collecting the data each day, but as the trend seemed to be unchanging, we decided we would put our time and effort into areas of greater need," she said.

Bayer said the majority of cases being reported by school nurses still are "influenza-like illnesses." Officials also still are keeping an eye on staff absences and the various sanitizing and education steps taken to slow the spread of illness will be kept in place indefinitely.

The absence rate "is still elevated, but it is coming down," she said.


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 Post subject: Re: West Virginia
PostPosted: Sun Nov 01, 2009 4:26 pm 
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Joined: Mon Aug 24, 2009 8:52 am
Posts: 1208
Quote:
CHARLESTON -- A 58 year-old female passed away at a Kanawha County Hospital on Saturday Oct. 31, 2009 from influenza A,Kanawha-Charleston Health Department (KCHD).
This is the first H1N1 death in Kanawha County and the sixth swine flu related death reported in West Virginia, according to the KCHD.

"We mourn the loss of our County resident and while tragic, it reinforces why the H1N1 vaccination efforts are so important," said Dr. Rahul Gupta.

The female tested positive for influenza A earlier in the week, according to the KCHD, and 99 percent of influenza A viruses are being confirmed as 2009 H1N1 of swine-origin.





http://wowktv.com/story.cfm?func=viewst ... ryid=69523


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