Anonymous wrote:Will antibiotics help this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had it. My kids are older and otherwise healthy. No one needed to be hospitalized. My 21 year old daughter was by far the sickest. She picked it up in her college dorm and brought it home with her.
The symptoms were those of a bad cold, plus an unusually high fever. My daughter developed pneumonia.
So this was last May? Did they do the test? I ask because this doesn't sound typical -- your kids are older and I thought a high fever was not a part of it.
Older children and adults get it. They just aren't being hospitalized at the rate that younger kids are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had it. My kids are older and otherwise healthy. No one needed to be hospitalized. My 21 year old daughter was by far the sickest. She picked it up in her college dorm and brought it home with her.
The symptoms were those of a bad cold, plus an unusually high fever. My daughter developed pneumonia.
So this was last May? Did they do the test? I ask because this doesn't sound typical -- your kids are older and I thought a high fever was not a part of it.
Anonymous wrote:We had it. My kids are older and otherwise healthy. No one needed to be hospitalized. My 21 year old daughter was by far the sickest. She picked it up in her college dorm and brought it home with her.
The symptoms were those of a bad cold, plus an unusually high fever. My daughter developed pneumonia.
Anonymous wrote:My friend's son has a suspected case of the new respiratory virus and was told that they aren't testing for it in our area yet. The doctor who admitted him said there's no doubt given the number of new cases and the increase in children being admitted but they have yet to be ordered to test for it.
Both of my friend's kids got the illness but the older one required hospitalization and round the clock breathing treatment. It's a tough illness resulting in an absurd number of hospitalizations.
http://www.cdc.gov/non-polio-enterovirus/about/ev-d68.html