08.15.2005
Being informed is the best protection for your own safety and health
From the Massachusetts Nurse Newsletter
July/August 2005 Edition
By Evelyn Bain, M Ed, RN, COHN-S
Associate Director/Coordinator, Health & Safety
Reports and comments about avian flu dot newspapers and magazines and flash through the airwaves, on TV, the radio and the internet. The question repeated over and over is, “Will avian flu be the source of the next pandemic (a world wide infectious disease event)?”
Think of it this way: the first cases may well turn up in a group of workers, who recently returned from a business trip to a once exotic land. They will probably appear in community emergency departments—in the dark of the night—most likely on a holiday weekend and with no idea of what they may have been exposed to or are carrying.
They might just have fevers. They may be coughing. Or they may feel weak and will be in need of medical attention. They may think they are sick from the suspect air quality from the very long airplane trip. You may suspect otherwise if a questions about their recent past travel is included on your history sheet.
Point being: People, even our next door neighbors, travel routinely to countries like China, Thailand and Korea, where infectious diseases, like avian flu, have been recognized. These travelers return to home base quickly and sometimes they bring infectious diseases with them. Remember SARS?
So, how can we as nurses be prepared to prevent the spread of diseases like avian flu and protect our own health in the meantime?
Read the next two items recently distributed by the CDC, Infection Control and Avian Influenza Recommendations and the Avian Influenza Threat, to inform the public and the health care community about where information and actions on these diseases stand at present.