| Home > Children > |
| Home > Children > |
COVENTRY, R.I. - Rhode Island officials canceled school Thursday and Friday for more than 20,000 students because of a suspected case of meningitis and the death of a second-grader from encephalitis. Health experts are trying to determine whether the cases are connected. "Given the parents' concerns and our concerns, we felt that out of abundance of caution we would keep schools closed for the next two days," said Dr. David Gifford, state public health director. In addition, the Catholic Diocese of Providence closed eight schools in three communities, with a combined 2,600 students, as a precaution. No cases of meningitis or encephalitis have been reported among the students, said diocese spokesman Michael Guilfoyle. The case of suspected meningitis was reported Wednesday in an unidentified student in Coventry. Also, two weeks ago, Dylan Gleavey, a Warwick elementary school student, died of encephalitis. A classmate of hers and a girl at a West Warwick school also contracted encephalitis but have since recovered. Dylan's encephalitis was brought on by "walking pneumonia," a common illness that in rare cases can lead to meningitis or encephalitis.
Meningitis is a dangerous inflammation of the membranes around the brain and spinal cord. Encephalitis is an inflammation of the brain. More epidemiologists from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention headed to the state to assist the half-dozen scientists already in Rhode Island. Health investigators said they will spend the next few days talking to school nurses and looking for possible additional cases in hospitals.
The school closings affected students in three communities south of Providence: 11,500 in Warwick; 6,000 in Coventry; and 4,000 in West Warwick. The three communities have had an unusually high incidence of pneumonia, Gifford said. Doreen Simao of Coventry said she had been sending her 5-year-old son, Malakie, to kindergarten each day with a small bottle of hand sanitizer because of the illnesses. Joanne Grace, the mother of a 5-year-old Coventry girl, said officials "definitely did the right thing." "There's too much of a risk for someone to get something potentially fatal," Grace said. ?2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |
|
Top Stories
Premature Canadian sextuplets face challengesCountry's first set of six babies was born
R.I. schools closed for meningitis scareMore than 20,000 students kept home after 2nd-gr
Surgery to stunt girl's growth sparks debateParents say drastic treatment allows them to
10 is the new 15 as kids grow up fasterFrom dating to cellphones, music to makeup, behav
FDA panel OKs Celebrex use for childrenAdvisers split on whether drug is safe, recommend
N.H. first state to offer girls free cancer vaccineStarting in January, program will pro
|
|
Related
WEDNESDAY, Feb. 14 (HealthDay News) -- Genetic clues that reveal a brain cell\'s origin Parents urged to donate newborn's cord bloodCan be used for bone marrow transplants to h Infants form memories early, but also forgetBabies lose the information faster than adul Warning on diarrhea vaccine for infantsTwisting of intestines reported after babies rece
Mismatched hearts save babies' livesLack of immune rejection fuels wrong-blood-type tran
Dads' comments may push girls toward bulimiaParental criticism and weight worries affect
Surprise hope for recovery from Rett syndromeStunning experiment reverses autism-related
Born to be bad? Genetic research says maybeArgumentative parents pass on behavior proble
|

