Swine flu testing to be focused on severe cases

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Dr. Martin Jones uses hand sanitizer Friday after seeing a patient whom he tested for swine flu at Care Now in Allen, Texas. (AP photo)
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CHICAGO – Illinois joined the grim and growing list of states with confirmed swine flu cases and handed out stockpiled drugs while businesses ramped up for the possibility of employees working from home.

The state's official count Saturday grew to 88 probable and confirmed cases of swine flu. The first probable cases were also reported outside Chicago and its suburbs, to include one positive case in each Sangamon and Winnebago counties, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Although more cases are expected, Dr. Damon Arnold, head of the Illinois Department of Public Health, said in a news release Saturday there is no need to be alarmed.

"We have prepositioned antiviral medications and medical supplies at hospitals and local health departments across the state so if and when they are needed, they will be readily available," Arnold said.

In a news conference Friday, Arnold said that testing for swine flu would focus on hospitalized patients with severe illness. While it’s unclear whether the new standard would even have detected any of the cases already identified, he said one aim was to calm the public.

“We don’t want to react with fear,” Arnold added.

Health department spokeswoman Melaney Arnold said the new, less aggressive testing standard would reduce a backlog of untested samples.

Officials have tested more than 500 specimens from patients with flu symptoms and continue to receive more samples from doctors everyday. The health department is using existing staff and resources to keep up.

But the state’s running tally will no longer “truly represent” the number of swine flu cases in Illinois, the spokeswoman said, because most cases have been mild, that is, similar in severity to regular flu, and can be handled by doctors without tests to confirm the new virus.

The new strain is a mix of pig, bird and human genes to which people have limited natural immunity. Its symptoms are nearly identical to regular flu – fever, cough and sore throat – and it spreads the same way, through tiny particles in the air, when people cough or sneeze.

A dozen deaths in Mexico and one in the United States have been attributed to confirmed cases of swine flu. In contrast, it’s estimated 36,000 people die every year from ordinary human flu in the United States.

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