What you can do to prepare for H1N1 flu

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(MCT) — Face masks aren’t recommended for the general public at this time, but public health officials want Iowans to know precautions they can take against the H1N1 flu, formerly known as swine flu.

“Our message is, we still need to look at practicing prevention now,” Curtis Dickson, director of Linn County Public Health, said last night at a news conference with officials from Mercy Medical Center, St. Luke’s Hospital and the Emergency Management Agency.

Those agencies, school districts and others have been meeting to discuss emergency plans should the H1N1 flu become more widespread.

Johnson County Public Health director Doug Beardsley said similar meetings were taking place in Johnson County.

The number of confirmed cases in the United States rose Thursday to at least 130, with one death of a toddler in Texas. Cases were reported in Arizona, California, Indiana, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada, New York, Ohio, South Carolina and Texas.

Results might not be known until today on the two possible cases of H1N1 — formerly called swine flu — in Iowa.

The specimens arrived Thursday at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

Pat Blake, spokeswoman for the University Hygienic Laboratory, which conducts testing for the state, said results were expected within 24 hours, but timing depends on the CDC’s caseload.

Blake said the lab had sent out nearly 1,900 specimen collection tubes to doctor’s offices, clinics and hospitals and had received back 329 samples for testing as of last night.

Though it’s late in the season, cases of seasonal flu were still being detected, she said.

The two suspected cases of H1N1 were identified Wednes day in Iowa from a man who had been in southern California and a woman who had been in Mexico.

According to the Iowa Department of Public Health, they traveled around Scott, Clinton, Johnson, Des Moines and Muscatine counties, doing everyday activities when they were in their infectious period.

Beardsley would not say where the potential patient had traveled in Johnson County but noted that residents who had been in contact with that person were contacted by public health workers.

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