No
vaccine for you?
Here’s how to dodge the flu
By Patricia
Anstett
Knight Ridder Newspapers
(KRT) - Can't
get a flu shot? Then educate and protect yourself. Chances are,
you'll avoid picking up someone else's flu germs and stay healthy.
With the flu
season under way, we called on experts for ways to help you stay
healthy this flu season. Here's what you need to know:
How flu bugs spread
Flu viruses
come in various types, or strains, and some years they're stronger
than others. They keep changing, too.
Just when the
experts think they know how to stop them, they change, or mutate,
again.
Dr.
Howard Markel, a University
of Michigan professor and author of the new book "How Germs
Travel" (Pantheon, $25), says it's like preparing to play a
U-M football team wearing maize-and-blue uniforms in the first half
of a game, only to come back after half time and see a team in green
and white. Predicting which strain of flu will emerge each year
is a guessing game made by educated guessers. They do their best.
But sometimes, they're wrong, and the vaccine doesn't match the
strain.
Flu germs spread
when a person with the flu coughs into the air, sneezes or touches
something with germy hands. The germs don't live long on toilet
seats, money or mail. But in a closed room or on an airplane, particularly
if the trip lasts more than three hours, you should avoid anyone
coughing or sneezing into the air.
If you are a
traveler and really worried, pay attention to the Web site www.cdc.gov,
to see which areas of the country are hardest hit by flu and consider
delaying trips there if you can.
If you're really
worried, take a page from last year's lessons on SARS prevention
and consider wearing an N-95 mask, the federally designated mouth
and nose defense system. Don't even think about traveling if you
have the flu.
If you want
to really be careful, open doors or hold straps on buses with a
paper towel. If people offer to shake your hand, politely say: "Sorry,
I'm not shaking hands right now. Hope you understand."
Some people
may not understand or think you are taking this flu stuff a bit
too seriously, but it's your health you are protecting.
First, do no harm
If you are sick,
please, please, stay home from work or school and refrain from doing
errands until you have stopped coughing and you no longer have a
fever.
Don't know if
what you have is a cold or the flu? Flu takes a big whack out of
you and typically is accompanied by a headache and a fever above
101 degrees. You won't be able to climb out of bed. You probably
will be unable to work from home for several days. Keep your distance
from everyone else until your coughing stops. Cough into your sleeve
or a tissue, not into your hands, and throw away the tissue immediately.
Flu know-how
Wash your hands
vigorously and often with plain old soap and warm water or, if you
prefer, an alcohol-based hand sanitizing product. Wash as long as
it takes to sing "Happy Birthday" twice. Experts say microbial
hand washes are a waste of money.
Avoid touching
your eyes, mouth and nose, where flu bugs like to gather. Eat properly.
Get a good night's sleep. Exercise. Stay strong.
If you get the
flu, go to your doctor immediately to get an anti viral medicine,
which should be taken during the first 2 days you experience flu
symptoms. These drugs, known under such brand and generic names
as Flumadine, Rimantadine, Relenza and Tamiflu, come in pill, syrup
and orally inhaled forms. Although they usually lessen the duration
and severity of the flu, they can cause some side effects, including
nervousness and anxiety.
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