Saturday, May 06, 2023

Detroit: Local Media Reporting H. influenzae Behind Closure of Garvey Academy

#17,439

Yesterday morning, in Detroit Health Dept. Statement On "Apparent Increase in Illness Amongst Elementary Students"we looked at an outbreak of an unidentified `flu-like' illness at a Detroit Elementary school, amid reports of one student death. 

Late yesterday afternoon, local media reported the cause had been identified; Haemophilus Influenzae, a bacterial infection that can be spread via through respiratory droplets (coughing or sneezing).

I've not found an update on the local Health Department website, twitter account, or Facebook page, but hopefully one will be posted soon with additional details, including the `type' of H. influenzae behind this outbreak. 

There are six identified (a-f) (and several un-typed) strains of H. influenzae, one of which - Type B - is covered by routine childhood vaccines (HiB).  Young children are, by far, the most susceptible to infection. 

H. influenzae can be carried asymptomatically by colonized individuals for several months (cite CDC Pink Book), while only causing invasive infections in a few. A preceding upper respiratory infection (viral or mycoplasma) may be an exacerbating factor to developing symptomatic illness.

The CDC maintains a webpage on this bacterial infection, where they describe this pathogen, and how it spreads.

Causes

Haemophilus influenzae disease is a name for any infection caused by bacteria called H. influenzae. There are 6 distinct types of H. influenzae (named a through f), as well as other H. influenzae that are classified as nontypeable. The one that people are most familiar with is H. influenzae type b or Hib.

These bacteria live in people’s nose and throat, and usually cause no harm. However, the bacteria can sometimes move to other parts of the body and cause infection.

Experts do not know how long it takes after H. influenzae enter a person’s body for someone to get sick. However, it could take as little as a few days before symptoms appear.
 
How it spreads

People spread H. influenzae, including Hib, to others through respiratory droplets. People who are infected spread the bacteria by coughing or sneezing, which creates small respiratory droplets that contain the bacteria. Other people can get sick if they breathe in those droplets. People who are not sick but have the bacteria in their noses and throats can still spread the bacteria. That is how H. influenzae spreads most of the time. The bacteria can also spread to people who have close or lengthy contact with a person with H. influenzae disease.

People at increased risk

H. influenzae, including Hib, disease occurs mostly in children younger than 5 years old and adults 65 years or older. American Indian people, Alaska Native people, and people with certain medical conditions are also at increased risk. Those medical conditions include:
  • Sickle cell disease
  • Asplenia (no spleen)
  • HIV infection
  • Antibody and complement deficiency syndromes (rare conditions that affect the body’s ability to fight infections)
  • Cancer requiring treatment with chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or bone marrow stem cell transplant
           (Continue . . . )

Local media reports that the school closed last week (Garvey Academy) for a  `deep cleaning' will reopen on Monday and the health department is recommending prophylactic antibiotics to household contacts of known cases, and others at greater risk. 

Given the extended (and somewhat ambiguous) incubation period for H. influenzae, we may hear of additional cases in the days and weeks to come.