Parents urged to avoid 'swine flu parties'
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Parents were warned today not to take their children to "swine
flu parties" in the hope they will catch the disease now and build
up immunity.
Although no firm evidence has emerged of such events taking place,
family website mumsnet.com has witnessed discussions over whether
parents should take steps to ensure their children acquire immunity
before the main flu season in the winter, when some people expect
the virus to be more potent.
For many years, parents have deliberately exposed their children to
playmates with chickenpox in order to allow them to have the
once-only disease at a convenient time, but British Medical
Association expert Dr Richard Jarvis today warned against taking
the same approach with swine flu.
His warning came the day after news emerged of the first death of a
child with swine flu in the UK.
A schoolgirl, believed to have been a pupil at the Mayfield
specialist school in Birmingham, which caters for children with
learning difficulties, died at the city's Children's Hospital
within the past few days, health chiefs said.
She is the third person with swine flu to die in the UK since the
start of the outbreak, but it is not yet known if the disease
contributed to her death.
A spokesman for NHS West Midlands said the child had "other serious
underlying health conditions" and tested positive for swine flu
following her death.
The West Midlands has been declared a hotspot for the disease, with
2,104 confirmed cases so far, more than a third of the UK's total
and more than two-fifths of all the cases in England.
Mumsnet founder Justine Roberts told the BBC Radio 4 Today
programme that she had heard rumours of "swine flu parties" taking
place.
"There is an awful lot of discussion from people who have come up
with a fairly rational conclusion that it might be better to pick
this up now, given that we all think it might mutate to a more
virulent strain in the winter," she said.
"We have heard of people saying 'Can we come round to your house
when you get it?' There's definitely a prevailing view that it
might be better to get it now and some people are not despairing if
there is a case in their school."
But Dr Jarvis, the chairman of the BMA's public health committee,
told Today: "I think parents would want to take into account that
the flu - although this particular strain is relatively mild for
the most part - is something that will knock people off their feet
for a few days and we are seeing appreciable morbidity, severe
side-effects and sadly the occasional death.
"My advice to parents would be to take this into account before
taking any child along to a flu party."
Dr Jarvis added: "We haven't picked up any good evidence to suggest
that it is happening. In fact, we have picked up quite a lot of
evidence that the opposite is happening - people are scared,
justifiably, and children are being removed from school when there
isn't any need to actually do that."
However, he insisted there was no need for parents to panic.
"It certainly isn't something we should be scared about," he said.
"There is absolutely no cause for panic. The UK is extremely well
prepared for this and the response so far has been extremely
good.
"We are now moving from what we term containment - which is
pressing very hard on all known cases so we can prevent
transmission - to outbreak control and treatment.
"Obviously the numbers are going to increase. This is something
which nobody has immunity to, so large proportions of the
population are going to get it at some point."
Since Friday, 1,604 swine flu cases have been confirmed in England,
taking the country's total to 4,968 and the UK's total so far to
5,937.
Last week health officials said the West Midlands, along with
London, which has 1,564 confirmed cases so far, would adopt a
policy of outbreak management, with swine flu cases being
clinically diagnosed rather than being confirmed by laboratory
results.
The new policy means swabbing will take place only for a small
number of cases to keep track of the strength of the virus.
Doctors will also use the drug Tamiflu more selectively, targeting
only people with symptoms. The drug is unlikely to be handed out to
everyone who has come into contact with a swine flu sufferer as a
precaution.
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