Welcome to "What's New on the CDC Swine Flu Website."
As of April 25 at 7:30 PM ET, CDC has confirmed 11 human cases of swine flu in the United States: seven in California, two in Texas, and two in Kansas. CDC continues to investigate other suspected cases.
Investigations are ongoing to determine the source of the infection and whether additional people have been infected with similar swine influenza viruses.
CDC is working very closely with state and local officials in California, Texas, as well as with health officials in Mexico, Canada and the World Health Organization. On April 24th, CDC deployed 7 epidemiologists to San Diego County, California and Imperial County, California and 1 senior medical officer to Texas to provide guidance and technical support for the ongoing epidemiologic field investigations. CDC has also deployed to Mexico 1 medical officer and 1 senior expert who are part of a global team that is responding to the outbreak of respiratory illnesses in Mexico.
Influenza is thought to spread mainly person-to-person through coughing or sneezing of infected people. There are many things you can to do to prevent getting and spreading influenza. Visit the CDC Swine Flu website to learn more >>
CDC has posted several new swine flu documents and resources in the past few days, including the following:
- Taking Care of a Sick Person in Your Home
- Safe travel information for the U.S. and Mexico
- Swine Flu Video Podcast
- Swine Influenza and You
We also encourage you to follow CDCemergency on Twitter to keep up with latest confirmed news from CDC on the swine flu investigation.
Visit the CDC Swine Flu website.
To change your subscriptions or preferences or stop subscriptions anytime, log in to your User Profile with your e-mail address. For questions or problems with the service, contact support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
This service is provided by CDC. Visit us on the web at www.cdc.gov.
|
|
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) · 1600 Clifton Rd · Atlanta GA 30333 · 800-CDC-INFO (800-232-4636)