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Visitors urged to keep flu out of hospital
Visitors to hospitals in North and East Yorkshire are being urged to help protect patients and staff by reducing the spread of flu.
Flu, short for influenza, is a common infectious viral illness spread by coughs and sneezes. It can prove fatal for vulnerable people, with those aged 65 and over and with long-term health conditions, including diabetes and kidney disease, particularly at risk.
Emma George, Assistant Director of Nursing at York Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust said:
“We are asking people who have been unwell with symptoms of flu not to visit the hospital until they have been free of symptoms for at least two days. This is really important because the virus is highly infectious and outbreaks can happen quickly. We ask that people think carefully before paying any non-essential visits, and to keep hands clean and be vigilant about hand washing. This is to keep the virus contained and to help visitors keep themselves safe as well as their friends or relatives.”
Visitors are asked to:
Stay away if they have signs or symptoms of the infection. Some of the main symptoms of flu include:
- a high temperature (fever) of 38C (100.4F) or above
- tiredness and weakness
- a headache
- general aches and pains
- a dry, chesty cough
- cold-like symptoms - such as a blocked or runny nose, sneezing, and a sore throat - can also be caused by flu, but they tend to be less severe than the other symptoms you have.
- think carefully before paying any non-essential visits at this time
- keep hands clean and be vigilant about hand washing.
- respect the fact that if a ward is closed due to the virus, this also applies to visitors. There are exceptions to this, and the ward sister can advise visitors if they feel they have exceptional circumstances.
You can protect yourself, your family and other patients by getting yourself vaccinated. The flu vaccination is available every year to help protect adults and children at risk of flu and its complications.
The injected flu vaccine is offered free on the NHS annually to:
- adults over the age of 18 at risk of flu (including everyone aged 65 and over)
- pregnant women
- children aged six months to two years at risk of flu
29 December 2017