Boone County joins the Iowa Department of Public Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in encouraging all residents to get their yearly flu vaccination. “The flu vaccine is safe and it saves lives,” said Vicki McCambridge, Director, Boone County Public Health. “Healthy people, including healthy children and young adults, can get very ill from the flu and can spread the flu to others. By getting a yearly flu vaccine you can protect yourself from illness, and protect those around you.” It’s especially important to be vaccinated if you have regular contact with people more vulnerable to the complications of flu, including babies, children with asthma, and the elderly.
Boone County Public Health will be offering a Flu Clinic on October 18th from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. at the Boone County Hospital Home Health Care office located at 105 South Marshall Street, Boone. To schedule an appointment, call 432-1127 or (800) 395-3797. For adults 19 years and older, the cost is $30 for the shot and $44 for the flu mist; there is no cost if on Medicare part B. There is no fee for children 6 months of age through 18 years; however, a $17 administration fee is encouraged. Flu Clinics at the Boone Schools will be held November 1st, 5 to 8 p.m., at Page Elementary School and Lincoln Elementary School, and November 3rd, 1 to 2 p.m. at Boone High School, and 2 to 4 p.m. and 5 to 8 p.m. at Franklin Elementary School. Students from the Middle School will need to go to one of the locations listed. For questions regarding the Flu Clinic, call Boone County Public Health at 432-1127.
The CDC recommends annual influenza vaccinations for everyone 6 months of age and older. This year’s flu vaccine is plentiful and available in both the injectable (‘shot in the arm’) and mist (‘spray in the nose’) options; the vaccine protects against the three most common flu viruses expected to circulate this year, including the 2009 H1N1 virus.
Influenza is a respiratory illness that most often causes fever, headache, extreme tiredness, muscle pain, dry coughing, sore throat, and runny nose. In children, diarrhea sometimes accompanies the respiratory symptoms. The flu virus is spread when people who are ill cough or sneeze without covering their mouths and noses. Others get sick when they breathe in the air containing the flu virus. A person can also get the flu by touching a surface or object (like a door handle) that has been touched recently by someone with the flu (who coughed into their hand), and then touching their own mouth, eyes, or nose.
For more information on influenza, visit www.idph.state.ia.us/Cade/Influenza.aspx?pg=FluHome. For information about the influenza vaccine, including where you may find a local vaccine provider, visit www.idph.state.ia.us/Cade/Influenza.aspx?pg=FluVaccine. |