Arizona officials urge cleanliness as respiratory illness hits nation’s kids
Sep 9, 2014, 1:45 PM | Updated: 1:45 pm
PHOENIX — Hundreds of American children in 10 states have contracted a respiratory virus spread similarly to the common cold.
While the illness has yet to be reported in Arizona, that hasn’t stopped state health officials from urging cleanliness to prevent its spread.
“Wash your hands, wash your hands, wash your hands,” said Jessica Rigler with the Arizona Department of Health. “Before you eat, after you go to the bathroom. For the little ones, anytime they are about to put those little fingers in their mouths, wash their hands to keep germs from entering the body.”
Nearly 500 children have been treated at one hospital alone — Children’s Mercy in Kansas City, Missouri — and some required intensive care, according to authorities.
The suspected germ, enterovirus 68, is an uncommon strain of a very common family of viruses that typically hit from summertime through autumn.
The virus can cause mild coldlike symptoms including runny noses, coughing and wheezing but Mark Pallansch, director of the viral diseases division at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said this summer’s cases are unusually severe and include serious breathing problems.
“It’s not highly unusual but we’re trying to understand what happened this year in terms of these noticeable and much larger clusters of severe respiratory disease,” Pallansch said Monday.
The virus typically causes illness lasting about a week and most children recover with no lasting problems.
Cases have been confirmed in Missouri and Illinois. CDC said it is testing to see if the virus caused respiratory illnesses reported in children in Alabama, Colorado, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Oklahoma and Utah. The states’ tally changes as specimens are confirmed or test negative. A spokeswoman for Iowa’s public health department said CDC tests confirmed the virus in samples from patients in central Iowa and a Colorado hospital said it has confirmed cases.
Children with asthma and other health problems are especially at risk for the enterovirus, but reported cases include children without asthma who have developed asthmalike breathing problems, Pallansch said. He said no deaths have been reported in the outbreak.
Dr. Anne Schuchat with the CDC said at a Monday news briefing that there are other viruses making kids sick.
“Most of the runny noses out there are not going to be turning into this,” she said.
KTAR’s Sandra Haros and the Associated Press contributed to this report.