Health > Meningitis Shots Needed for Summer Camp Kids
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Children heading to sleep-away
camp -- just like those going away to college -- face an
increased risk of contracting bacterial meningitis, warns a
mother whose son nearly died of the infection.
So parents should protect their kids by making sure they
get the meningococcal vaccine, Nancy Springer, a founding
member of the non-profit National Meningitis Association (NMA)
living in Westchester County, New York, told Reuters Health.
"Don't be afraid of sending your child to camp, but be an
educated parent," Springer said in an interview.
Up to 3,000 people in the US contract meningococcal disease
each year, 30% of whom are teens and young adults, according to
the NMA. One quarter of adolescents with the infection will
die, while up to one fifth of survivors will be permanently
disabled.
Springer's son Nick became ill with meningococcal
meningitis in August 1999, while away at summer camp in
Massachusetts. After a doctor diagnosed the infection, the
14-year-old received IV antibiotics and was sent to the
hospital. Soon afterwards, he was airlifted to a hospital with
a burn unit, where he spent two months in a drug-induced coma.
After he awoke, doctors amputated both his legs above the knees
and both arms below the elbows.
Nick Springer is now a junior in college in Florida and a
member of the US Wheelchair Paralympic Rugby Team, which won
the recent World Cup games in New Zealand. "He's doing just
great," his mother said. "We're very grateful."
Springer formed the NMA with four other parents whose
children had been struck by meningococcal meningitis. She
wasn't aware of the vaccine before sending Nick to camp,
Springer says, but would have made sure he'd gotten it if she
had been.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta
now recommends the meningococcal meningitis vaccine for all
children 11 to 12 years old, and for young people entering high
school or college who haven't previously had the shot. The
vaccine protects against four of the five strains of bacteria
that cause the infection, and is up to 83% effective.
Because the vaccine isn't a 100% guarantee of protection,
Springer notes, children should be warned against activities
that can spread the bug, for example drinking out of the same
water bottle or sharing lip gloss.
The vaccine is particularly crucial, she added, because the
infection strikes so rapidly and can easily be mistaken for the
flu. Symptoms include vomiting and fever, and many people don't
have the stiff neck thought to be the hallmark of meningitis.
"That's the danger of this disease," Springer explained. "The
onset is so sudden and extreme that when a doctor hopefully
makes the diagnosis, you are hours away from death."
For more information, see the NMA's Web site at
www.nmaus.org.
2007-06-03
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