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H1N1 Flu Cases In City Continue To Rise


sff.jpgWhile the number of confirmed cases of H1N1 flu virus in New York City rose to 62 by late Saturday, health officials reassured the public that all the cases have been mild.

All but three of those cases are associated with St. Francis Prep High School in Fresh Meadows, Queens, according to the city Department of Health.

The school has been closed all week after hundreds of students came down with flu-like symptoms, and an SAT test that was supposed to be held there Saturday was postponed until May 16.

Five of the confirmed cases are from nearby P.S. 177, another Queens school near St. Francis Prep that plans to reopen on Wednesday, according to Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Of the three confirmed cases of H1N1 virus not connected with St. Francis Prep, two are associated with travel to Mexico, where the particular strand originated and has killed at least 16 people.

Only one confirmed case in the city is neither associated with St. Francis Prep nor Mexican travel.

Another 17 probable cases of H1N1 flu were being tested on Saturday by the Centers for Disease Control, and of those 14 cases are associated with St. Francis Prep.

By late Saturday, the number of confirmed H1N1 cases nationwide had risen to at least 160 in more than 20 states.

In his weekly address, President Barack Obama said his administration is working aggressively to avoid a potential pandemic.

He said since people have not developed an immunity to the new strain of flu, it has the potential to cause greater harm.

Obama also said he asked Congress for $1.5 billion to buy more medicine and equipment in case they are needed.

Obama said the CDC has asked schools and daycare facilities with confirmed cases of the flu virus to close for up to two weeks.

He also urged employers to let any infected workers take off as many sick days as they need to recover.

CDC officials said they were in the process of sending out courses of anti-influenza drugs to 30 states.

The CDC also sent testing kits to states to relieve pressure on its Atlanta office.

In response to the H1N1 outbreak, some airlines are cutting service to Mexico, where more than 350 people have been infected.

Continental Airlines said it would cut its Mexican flights and slash capacity by 50 percent by using smaller aircraft.

As for passengers who want to cancel flights to Mexico they have already booked, Continental is waving change fees until May 31.

United Airlines said it plans to slash its weekly flights for next month by more than half, and Delta said it would also reduce service but by Saturday had not said by how much.

But the virus is still spreading around the globe, with more than 700 confirmed cases worldwide by Saturday.

The CDC confirmed Saturday one case of the H1N1 virus in Costa Rica – the first case in Latin America outside of Mexico.

Officials in South Korea and China confirmed those countries’ first cases of the virus on Friday.

China had suspended flights from Mexico to Shanghai.

(Source: NY1)



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