Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Flu-B plus Norwalk(?) - UK - Vomiting bug spreads across city

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Flu-B plus Norwalk(?) - UK - Vomiting bug spreads across city

    Vomiting bug spreads across city
    Thirteen schools are now closed and 70 are under "no visiting" restrictions as a winter vomiting bug tightens its grip on classrooms across Bradford.
    The measures have affected almost half of the city's 88,000 pupils, the local education authority said on Monday.
    It urged parents to impose an Easter holiday curfew on ill children in a bid to stop the spread of the virus.
    The city council also said it feared the current outbreak was so widespread it could hit this year's GCSE results.
    A spokeswoman said the local authority was preparing to send in teams of environmental health officers to deep-clean schools over the 11-day Easter break, which starts on Thursday 13 April.
    One more school - Thornton primary - was added to the list of full closures on Monday. That means 83 of the city's 208 schools have been affected in some way.
    Where restrictions are in place, parents are being asked to drop off and pick up children at the school gates and out-of-school clubs have been cancelled.

    <TABLE><TBODY><TR><TD width=5></TD><TD class=fact>BRADFORD'S CLOSED SCHOOLS
    <!--Smva-->Iqra Primary
    High Fernley Primary
    Carlton Bolling College
    Woodlands Primary
    Carrwood Primary
    St Bede's Secondary
    All Saint's Primary (Bradford)
    Worthinghead Primary (reception)
    Nab Wood Secondary
    Barker End Primary
    Thornton Primary
    <!--Emva--></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

    In total, 43 schools or nurseries have been closed in the city since the outbreak started in mid-February.
    Anthony Mugan, head of Bradford Council's education client team, said: "During the Easter holiday we will continue to apply the appropriate precautions, restrictions, and deep cleans where appropriate on a case-by-case basis.
    "We are also urging parents to help us to use the break as a chance to stop the spread of the bug and to keep their children at home if they are poorly.
    "The virus is spreading daily to more schools, and schools are doing all they can to help stop it spreading further."
    Children with symptoms of sickness or diarrhoea should not attend any community events during the break, such as sports camps and activities held in community halls, churches schools or mosques until they are clear of any symptoms for at least 48 hours.
    "This is a community-wide issue and we hope people will work together to help us to wipe out the bug over Easter," said Mr Mugan.
    A council spokeswoman said the outbreak had disrupted a scheme under which GCSE pupils move between the city's schools to study specialist subjects.
    "This means they can't visit the schools which specialise in their subjects so there is real concern that this may affect our results this year," she said.

    Story from BBC NEWS:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/h...rd/4872382.stm

  • #2
    Re: Vomiting bug spreads across city

    I posted this story too, but added it to the ongoing thread about the so-called UK "winter vomiting virus". (http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showthread.php?t=135)
    It's clearly the same virus, although the "winter" tag has now been dropped for this story.

    Originally called Flu-B plus Norwalk, it's now a difficult ruse to maintain. (It had to be flu and Norwalk because Norwalk doesn't spread H2H in the air, yet this virus does.) It's killed at least 3 children/teenagers in the UK this winter (also odd for either Norwalk or flu-B). So let's say just for a moment, that this isn't what is claimed, what could it be?

    The source seems to be Anglesea - a North Wales Island which is also a winter resting place for migratory bar-headed geese (known asymptomatic carriers of H5N1). They come direct from Siberia in the Autumn, to Ireland; the UK Midlands; and Anglesea. The disease attributed to a virus in the local reservoir in Anglesea (but never found), which required 30,000 locals to boil all their tap water for 3 months (and made children similarly sick), started at about the same time that the outbreaks in Sibreia waned. The outbreaks in Sibreia BTW lead to the closure of the reservoirs after some children got sick after swimming in the water. The symptoms were the same and although the link between H5N1 and the Siberia children wasn't made officially, H5N1 was confirmed soon afterwards in the area.

    Of course this may all be a coincidence, but if this is still flu-B plus Norwalk, I'm a bannana.

    Comment

    Working...
    X