eWellness: Who needs anti-viral drugs in swine flu?
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Dr KK Aggarwal 03 September 2017
Facts
In the United States, 0.3% of all cases require admissions.
The mortality rate of flu pandemic is 0.12 deaths per 100,000 population.
Total number of deaths caused by pandemic H1N1 influenza A in the United States was lower than the number of deaths caused by seasonal influenza during non-pandemic years
Early and prompt initiation of antiviral therapy is recommended for children, adolescents, or adults with suspected or confirmed swine flu with any of the following features:
Flu requiring hospitalization
Progressive, severe, or complicated flu
Severely immunosuppressed patients (receiving treatment for malignancies, hematopoietic or solid organ transplant recipients)
Swine flu at high risk for complications:
Children <5 years particularly those <2 years
Elderly =65 years
Pregnant women
Women up to 2 weeks postpartum
Residents of nursing homes and other chronic care facilities
Individuals with chronic medical conditions including: lung disease, including asthma (particularly if steroids have been required during the past year); heart disease, except isolated hypertension; active malignancy; chronic kidney disease, chronic liver disease, diabetes, sickle cell disease, other chronic disabling diseases and morbid obesity.
Severity of flu
Asymptomatic swine flu: Many contact illnesses may pass off without symptoms. In all 19 percent had serologically confirmed infection and 28 percent of those who were infected may remain asymptomatic.
Mild or uncomplicated swine flu (require no treatment, no hospitalization, no investigations)
Fever, cough, sore throat, nasal discharge, muscle pain, headache, chills, malaise and sometimes diarrhea and vomiting
No shortness of breath
Little change in chronic health conditions.
Progressive illness. Requires hospitalization
Above symptoms plus
Chest pain
Poor oxygenation (high respiratory rate, hypoxia, labored breathing in children)
Low blood pressure
Confusion, altered mental status
Severe dehydration
Exacerbations of asthma, chronic bronchitis, chronic renal failure, diabetes, or other cardiovascular conditions
Severe or complicated illness requires hospitalization
Signs of lower respiratory tract disease
Low oxygen requiring supplemental oxygen
Pneumonia on x-ray
Brain involvement
BP lower than 80, organ failure
Heart involvement
Persistent high fever and other symptoms beyond 3 days
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