First probable case of swine flu reported in MN; 2 schools closed
Updated: 4 mins ago
Swine Flu: What you need to know.
Related: Swine flu claims 1st victim in US
Pawlenty news conference live.
ST. PAUL, Minn. -- Minnesota health officials reported the first probable case of swine flu in the state Wednesday, and local officials closed two schools in the central Minnesota town of Cold Spring as a precaution.
Gov. Tim Pawlenty and other officials called a news conference for 9 a.m. to discuss the state's response.
Pawlenty news conerence live. Health Commissioner Sanne Magnan, State Epidemiologist Ruth Lynfield and Education Commissioner Alice Seagren were scheduled to be there.
The governor's office said in a statement that the Minnesota Department of Health is characterizing the case as "probable." That means the MDH lab has confirmed the virus as type A H1N1 influenza.
But the governor's office said the strain can't be identified using lab tests available to the department. It said additional testing by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will be needed to determine if the patient had the same unusual new strain of influenza that has made people sick in Mexico, several U.S. states and other countries.
Given the way the disease has spread, state health officials had said it was only a matter of time before it showed up in Minnesota.
As a result of the probable case, local officials voluntarily closed the Rocori Middle School and St. Boniface School in the central Minnesota town of Cold Spring, about 60 miles northwest of Minneapolis.
The announcement from the governor's office gave no details on the patient and did not say whether the patient was a student or school staff member, or give the patient's condition.
In a letter to parents Wednesday, Superintendent Scott Staska said he learned of a probable case of H1N1 novel influenza with an individual from ROCORI Middle School on Tuesday night. The individual was experiencing "flu-like symptoms" according to the letter.
Staska went on to say that the symptoms were not alarming but the strain was determined to need further investigating by the Center for Disease Control (CDC).
Health officials are trying to determine if the specific flu strain in this case is H1N1 novel influenza.
Stasks says the closure is a precautionary measure. ROCORI High School, Cold Spring Elementary, Richmond Elementary, and John Clark Elementary schools will remain open on Wednesday.
Michael Osterholm, a pandemic flu expert at the University of Minnesota, told AP Radio early detection efforts across the country seem to be working.
"I think the public health system has done a lot of work to prepare itself for the early detection of a potential pandemic flu virus in this country and I think that work is paying off," he said.
Osterholm said he wasn't surprised that the U.S. reported its first confirmed swine flu death Wednesday, a 23-month-old boy in Texas.
"I think over the next several days we're going to see a number of severe cases in the United States, and that doesn't fundamentally change anything about this disease at all," he said.
The Minnesota Department of Health advises that general safety precautions be exercised. Infection prevention measures include simple steps such as:
- covering your mouth and nose with a tissue when coughing or sneezing or coughing into your covered elbow rather than your hands
- washing your hands often with soap and water or an alcohol-based hand rub and
- staying home when you are sick