Bow schools pummeled by flu cases

Nearly one-third of students out
Bow schools pummeled by flu cases
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Bow schools are leading New Hampshire in an unhappy category: the highest absence rates linked to the flu. But state health officials warn the district is unlikely to stay ahead.

The absences in Bow peaked Thursday, when 27 percent of high school students and 29 percent of middle school students were reported absent. At the elementary school, where the spate of flu symptoms began last week, absences Thursday were at 13 percent.

"It's a little bit spotty," said Superintendent Dean Cascadden. "You'll walk into one class and there will be half the kids missing. You'll walk into another class and almost all the kids will be there."

It's not the usual attendance rate in Bow, but the state director of public health says Bow is a model for keeping sick kids home. No district has reported flu-related absence rates as high as Bow, said Dr. Jose Montero.

"Right now Bow may have some of the highest absenteeism rates we've seen," Montero said. "But it's basically what we're going to see all across the state as H1N1 expands."

The pummeling has been severe this week at Bow Memorial School, where 141 students were counted absent Wednesday and 150 were on Thursday. Principal Kirk Spofford canceled homework for the week so sick middle school students could focus on getting better. He said the community is handling the situation well, with parents coming right away to bring sick kids home. Few teachers at district schools have called in sick, so classes have proceeded as usual.

"There's no sense of alarm in the building at all," Spofford said.

At Bow High School, students with sore throats, coughs, headaches and stomachaches have packed the office of school nurse Leslie Bean.

"I'm seeing more elevated temperatures than I've experienced ever," Bean said.

She straps masks onto students waiting to go home but doesn't wear one herself. Bean said she's counting on getting rest, drinking liquids and taking vitamins - her regular preventative advice - to keep herself healthy.

Most sick students have stayed home for three to five days and recovered fully, Cascadden said. There has been one lab-confirmed case of H1N1 in the district, a result that shows the virus is in Bow but does little to affect the treatment of sick kids.

"It doesn't matter if you have H1N1 confirmed or not," Montero said. "Influenza-like illness you need to manage in just one way."

That's by washing hands, covering coughs and staying home if you feel sick, he said.

Bow officials have been in "permanent communication" with the state health department since the absence rates first spiked, Montero said. He complimented parents on keeping sick children home and looking out for other children whose parents are at work.

"I want to congratulate the Bow community and ask them to keep doing what they are doing," he said.

Even before the flu hit, the district had planned and prepared. Dispensers of hand sanitizer were affixed in classrooms and hallways, and teachers have talked up washing hands and covering coughs with shirt sleeves. When absences peaked this week, Cascadden sent out multiple e-mails alerting parents to the news.

Montero said he does not expect to ask any schools to close because of high rates of sickness.

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Stop the Hype and Hysteria

There is a push to classify all flu and cold syptoms as attributable to H1N1, but in fact only ONE of these students is a confirmed H1N1 case. For Dr. Jose Montero to refer to all these cases as H1N1 is irresponsible and the sort of thing that builds the hype around this flu.

The consequences of an undocumented health crisis can be costly and deadly as this allows the federal government to loosen and even eliminate standards for developing, preparing, preserving and administering vaccines. Rigerous testing and trials are thrown out the window in a rush to produce something...anything that can be injected in the American public. Fortunately we can still opt out.

I'm with nurse Bean getting appropriate rest, drinking liquids and taking vitamins to provide for protection and prevention.

4Liberty's picture

Be afraid, be very afraid ...

of attending government school

C. dog e. doGy's picture

Talkitout, Seriously?

Sure, there's that many parents who would let their kids stay home faking. Seriously, the fever is real and so is the illness. No panic, just sick kids.

Tippytoo's picture

I can not believe you wrote

I can not believe you wrote that. My husband is an ER Doc and he is seeing A LOT of H1N1 and the flu. It is in NH and a lot of people are sick.

WHKoch's picture

So, your husband is an ER doctor, what does that prove?

Is your husband personally seeing every child from Bow? A sore throat does not make it the flu. Neither does a runny nose. Or a fever for that matter. If all symptoms are confirmed it is H1N1 then yes, it is H1N1, but don't call everything the H1N1. That leads to senseless fear.

talkitout's picture

Is it the Flu, really?

Are the schools over reacting?

Are the kids taking advantage of this whole swine flu debacle?

Are the Nurses not wanting to deal with sick kids so they just send them home?

I heard someone complained of a sorethroat, and bam, gone. Another had a runny nose, bam, gone. Does this make sense?

Teach them to wash their hands. Preventative medicine!

Stop causing panic where it is not appropriate.

talkitout's picture

Don't miss this