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Rotavirus
What You Should Know
By Julia Rosien
Have you ever heard of rotavirus? Maybe not. Have your children ever had it? Probably so. As the most common cause of diarrhea and dehydration in infants, it affects almost all children before kindergarten age. Globally, rotavirus kills more children than any other disease or accident. In the United States, despite proper health care and clean water, it accounts for 500,000 physician visits, 50,000 hospitalizations and 20 deaths each year.
Rotavirus transfers from child to child by touch, living on hard surfaces such as toys or counter tops for short periods. Often a child touches a contaminated surface, touches his mouth and then ingests the germs. "The incubation period for rotavirus is two to four days," says Dr. Fay. Daycare centers and preschool groups pose high risks to young children during the rotavirus season because it's hard to discern when a child is contagious.
Lynn Smith's son began vomiting, but it wasn't until the mom of a child she babysat called that she panicked. "Her son was in the hospital with rotavirus," she says. Smith called the pediatrician immediately, and within two hours her son, too, was hospitalized. "The nurses wouldn't come in without masks, and they put a red container in the room for contaminated trash." Billions of rotavirus particles are passed in the bowel movements of someone who is infected, and hospital staffs take no chances in passing the virus to other patients.
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