Report: Kids Overlooked In Flu Pandemic
Report: Kids Overlooked In Flu Pandemic
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) â Children would likely be both prime spreaders and targets of a flu pandemic, but theyâre being overlooked in the nationâs preparations for the next super-flu, pediatricians and public health advocates reported in October.
The report urges the government to improve planned child protections, including how to care for youngsters if a pandemic closes schools.
âRight now, we are behind the curve in finding ways to limit the spread of a pandemic in children even though they are among the most at risk,â said Dr John Bradley of the American Academy of Pediatrics, which co-authored the report with the Trust for Americaâs Health.
Concern is rising that the Asian bird flu (H5N1) could trigger the next worldwide influenza epidemic if it mutates to become more easily spread person-to-person.
Children have long seemed particularly vulnerable to H5N1, possibly because they are more likely to touch or play with the diseased birds who spread it. A recent report says nearly 46 percent of bird flu deaths since 2003 were among those age 19 or younger.
Bird flu aside, germ-ridden youngsters already spur regular fluâs spread through communities every winter, and experts have long called for better pediatric pandemic preparations.
Among gaps cited included:
*A stockpile of antiflu medications contains only enough pediatric doses for 100,000 children; child vaccine doses are still under study.
*No protective face masks come in child sizes, although itâs also not clear that children would tolerate wearing one.
*There are no plans for how to feed the 30 million children who rely on the school lunch program if schools close.