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Rate Of Frum Children Infected With Shigellosis Skyrocketing


ex14.jpgAccording to the Journal News, Rockland County Health officials are tracking an outbreak of Shigellosis (shigella) – which is a highly contagious bacterial disease – among young children who attend Yeshivas and day care centers.

A total of 67 cases of shigellosis have been reported so far this year, with the majority of the infections occurring in the past three or four weeks. Most of the people who have the diseases live or attend school in the Monsey area.

YWN has learned that Yeshivas in Flatbush, Lakewood, Williamsburg, and other locations have seen a drastic increase the past few weeks as well. Although not all cases are definitely shigella, and possibly other viruses, many of the symptoms and treatments are the same.

YWN has compiled a list of important information regarding Shigella, courtesy of the CDC. Please take the time to read it, and protect your children – and yourselves.

What is shigellosis?

Shigellosis is an infectious disease caused by a group of bacteria called Shigella. Most who are infected with Shigella develop diarrhea, fever, and stomach cramps starting a day or two after they are exposed to the bacteria. The diarrhea is often bloody. Shigellosis usually resolves in 5 to 7 days. Persons with shigellosis in the United States rarely require hospitalization. A severe infection with high fever may be associated with seizures in children less than 2 years old. Some persons who are infected may have no symptoms at all, but may still pass the Shigella bacteria to others.

How can Shigella infections be diagnosed?

Many different kinds of germs can cause diarrhea, so establishing the cause will help guide treatment. Determining that Shigella is the cause of the illness depends on laboratory tests that identify Shigella in the stools of an infected person. The laboratory can also do special tests to determine which antibiotics, if any, would be best to treat the infection.

How can Shigella infections be treated?

Persons with mild infections usually recover quickly without antibiotic treatment.   However, appropriate antibiotic treatment kills Shigella bacteria, and may shorten the illness by a few days. The antibiotics commonly used for treatment are ampicillin, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (also known as Bactrim* or Septra*), ceftriaxone (Rocephin*), or, among adults, ciprofloxacin. Some Shigella bacteria have become resistant to antibiotics.  This means some antibiotics might not be effective for treatment.  Using antibiotics to treat shigellosis can sometimes make the germs more resistant. Therefore, when many persons in a community are affected by shigellosis, antibiotics are sometimes used to treat only the most severe cases. Antidiarrheal agents such as loperamide (Imodium*) or diphenoxylate with atropine (Lomotil*) can make the illness worse and should be avoided.

How do people catch Shigella?

The Shigella bacteria pass from one infected person to the next. Shigella are present in the diarrheal stools of infected persons while they are sick and for up to a week or two afterwards. Most Shigella infections are the result of the bacterium passing from stools or soiled fingers of one person to the mouth of another person. This happens when basic hygiene and handwashing habits are inadequate. It is particularly likely to occur among toddlers who are not fully toilet-trained. Family members and playmates of such children are at high risk of becoming infected.

Shigella infections may be acquired from eating contaminated food. Contaminated food usually looks and smells normal. Food may become contaminated by infected food handlers who forget to wash their hands with soap after using the bathroom. Vegetables can become contaminated if they are harvested from a field with sewage in it. Flies can breed in infected feces and then contaminate food. Water may become contaminated with Shigella bacteria if sewage runs into it, or if someone with shigellosis swims in or plays with it (especially in splash tables, untreated wading pools, or shallow play fountains used by daycare centers). Shigella infections can then be acquired by drinking, swimming in, or playing with the contaminated water.

What can a person do to prevent this illness?

Frequent and careful handwashing is important among all age groups. Handwashing among children should be frequent and supervised by an adult in daycare centers and homes with children who have not been fully toilet trained. 

If a child in diapers has shigellosis, everyone who changes the child’s diapers should be sure the diapers are disposed of properly in a closed-lid garbage can, and should wash his or her hands and the child’s hands carefully with soap and warm water immediately after changing the diapers. After use, the diaper changing area should be wiped down with a disinfectant such as diluted household bleach, Lysol* or bactericidal wipes.  When possible, young children with a Shigella infection who are still in diapers should not be in contact with uninfected children.

Basic food safety precautions and disinfection of drinking water prevents shigellosis from food and water. However, people with shigellosis should not prepare food or drinks for others until they have been shown to no longer be carrying the Shigella bacterium, or if they have had no diarrhea for at least 2 days.  At swimming beaches, having enough bathrooms and handwashing stations with soap near the swimming area helps keep the water from becoming contaminated.  Daycare centers should not provide water play areas.

Simple precautions taken while traveling to the developing world can prevent shigellosis. Drink only treated or boiled water, and eat only cooked hot foods or fruits you peel yourself. The same precautions prevent other types of traveler’s diarrhea.



6 Responses

  1. Very important point that was left out of the preventative measures “Frequent and careful handwashing is important among all age groups. Handwashing among children should be frequent and supervised by an adult in daycare centers and homes with children who have not been fully toilet trained.” WITH SOAP!!! Many people in our communities think just washing with water often from a washing cup is enough. IT ISN’T!!

  2. It is important to use soap when washing one’s hands. There may be many schools/day care centers, etc. that do not supply soap in their bathrooms. Ask your children. If this is the case, send an anonymous letter to the school that you will be calling the health department if they do not put soap in the bathrooms. Sometimes that is the only way to get quick results.

  3. Please hear me out- I think this is important… My introduction to this was when I was hospitalized with Shigella in a previous out break in 1995, which ran through certain pockets of the frum community on the East Coast. I was in serious shape when I was rushed to the emergency room. For some people this is a dangerous illness.

    Because of who did and did not get it among my friends I was able to identify another way it was spreading, which the CDC*, because it does not know our minhagim, had missed- HAND WASHING CUPS.

    Once I reported this to them in Atlanta, the next day all our local schools & restaurants were required to switch to large styrofoam, disposable cups for handwashing. Also all younger children were required to wash their hands thoroughly with soap and water, under supervision, as they came into the school building, and after using the bathroom. The epidemic stopped immediately.

    In many homes and institutions there is bathroom near the kitchen or cafeteria, and people using the toilet use the same hand washing cup as those washing for bread. The simple fact is- in certain situations this biologically is a set up for trouble.

    This is not a Hillel Hashem and there is no insult implied here. Even adults who are normally very clean about washing with soap after using the toilet, may become less careful when they are sick with this illness. To say it politely, you feel horrible from being sick and you make ALOT of trips to the bathroom, and wash your hands over and over, till it feels pointless. The after brucha takes on meaning, as never before.

    And it only takes one mistake. SHIGELLA IS HIGHLY CONTAGIOUS. Only ten bacterium is enough to give the disease to a healthy adult. A sick person passes thousands of them every time they go to the bathroom.

    I believe we need to pay attention to this in all communities, right now, with all the Yontif visiting coming up. The incubation period can be a day or two to a week. A person could be infecting others without knowing they are sick yet. A few who are contagious never show symptoms.

    I strongly suggest if you do not chose to temporarily switch to disposable cups for hand washing- wash your hand washing cup frequently each day, with soap and a scrub brush for the corners. The cleaner it is, the less there bacteria there will be on it, AND the less dish water food splashes, etc. there will be on it to feed any bacteria that do get there. Also use paper towels, not a shared dish towel for drying hands before eating. And, frequently wash the faucet handles, kitchen and bathroom, and the toilet seat. Provide shabbas soap if that is not against your customs. Supervise all children’s after bathroon washing for a while. (I got from a little friend who had just proudly announced he could “go by himself” now, and then served me my fish plate; they though he just had the flu.)
    Take the lead by washing carefully yourself and your guests will have no reason to feel insulted. (And maybe you ARE sick, and just don’t know it yet.)

    If you do get flu like symptoms that get worse GO TO THE DOCTOR, for your sake and for everyone else’s.

    May we all have a kosher, happy and healthy Pesach! Refuah Shalayma to those already sick.

    *CDC= Center for Disease Control.

  4. If you touch the inside lock on the bathroom door, flushometer on toilet, or sink handles, you can still contact the desease if someone else touched it that was infected. These places are touched before handwashing. Use a paper between your hands and these areas.

  5. avodaschesed how nice to see that somone bothers to find out the facts- most of this is just due to lack of supervised proper (20 sec) handwashing

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