| Wednesday, March 12th, 2008 | Emily Halevy | CWK Producer |
“Flu shots are recommended and decrease the severity of the illness. The flu shot only has a certain amount of strains in it, so you can still get the flu [after] you get a flu shot, but your chances are greatly decreased if you get the flu shot.”
– David Goo, M.D., Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta
Much of the nation is in the middle of a flu epidemic. A lot of kids are sick and staying home from school, and a lot of parents are missing work to take care of their kids. Now, after years of questions about how old kids should be to get a flu shot, the Centers for Disease Control is about to settle that debate.
Muscle aches, high fever, just feeling bad. Little Sha Juanna has the flu.
“Right in here it hurts?” the doctor asks Sha Juanna.
Across the country, the flu is spreading – some schools have closed, thousands of kids are home sick. The medical advisory committee to the CDC is now recommending that every child 6 months to 18 years of age get a flu shot.
“Flu shots are recommended and decrease the severity of the illness. The flu shot only has a certain amount of strains in it, so you can still get the flu [after] you get a flu shot, but your chances are greatly decreased if you get the flu shot,” says David Goo, M.D., Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.
Dr. Goo says a shot can mean the difference between your child having a slight fever with a runny nose and having very severe symptoms that can lead to hospitalization and worse.
“The flu can be very severe, and there are certain epidemics of flu that have been noted in history to have killed thousands and thousands of people at one time. I’ve seen many, many children get sick and not die because they have gotten their immunizations. So my advice is to get all your immunizations and get your flu shot; that’s really going to protect you,” says Dr. Goo.
Along with the vaccination, experts say, good hygiene is a must.
“Wash your hands often. If you’re coughing, cover your face. Especially, if you have a tissue, cover your face with a tissue. If you have a high-risk child, you might want to limit the play-groups and things like that,” says Eric Zerla, M.D., pediatrician.
Experts say that vaccinating kids against the flu will help protect them and everybody else.
“They’re the ones growing the germ, taking it home, giving it to other people. So if we could slow down the spread of the virus in children, we could slow down the spread of the virus throughout the whole community,” says Dr. Carden Johnston, emergency room pediatrician.