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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Big Isle gets 2 cases of swine flu


Advertiser Staff

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Dr. Chiyome Fukino

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The Big Island has gotten its first two cases of swine flu and O'ahu has added 12 more, the state Department of Health announced yesterday.

Since May 5, a total of 58 confirmed cases in the state have been reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Five of the new cases are school-age children on O'ahu who attend 'Aikahi Elementary in Kailua, 'Iliahi Elementary in Wahiawa, Kapolei Middle School, Mililani Middle School and Nanakuli High and Intermediate. All of the cases are mild, the Department of Education said yesterday. The school attended by a sixth child was not reported.

Mililani Middle School previously had a student and an adult with swine flu.

Until yesterday's announcement, the only non-O'ahu case involved a resident of Maui who contracted swine flu in Washington state.

The two Big Island patients are school-age children who are not attending school at this time, health officials said. One acquired the illness while traveling in another state and the other had contact with a confirmed case, health officials said.

Of the 14 new cases, six are adults and eight are school-age children. All of the people involved in the latest cases have recovered or are recovering at home with no complications, health officials said.

Of the 12 latest confirmed cases on O'ahu, two school-age children acquired their illness while traveling in another state; one child had contact with a previously confirmed case; and one adult had contact with a previously confirmed case.

"The number of cases is not alarming since we know community transmission is taking place," state health director Dr. Chiyome Fukino said in a statement.

"To date, this novel H1N1 virus is behaving similar to seasonal flu and individuals are recovering at home with no complications. It is important that we continue to carefully monitor the severity and spread of this flu strain."

Nationwide, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has tallied 6,764 confirmed or probable cases and 10 deaths.

The U.S. tally accounts for more than half the global total of 12,954 cases reported as of yesterday by the World Health Organization.

  • Special Report: Swine flu resources