Spate of illnesses might be common cold


Spate of illnesses might be common cold

Philadelphia Inquirer

PHILADELPHIA — “I had swine flu.” It is almost a badge of honor, suggesting that the speaker survived the first pandemic of the 21st century and is immune to the next wave.

It also may be wrong.

Tests at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia suggest that large numbers of people who got sick this fall actually fell victim to a sudden, unusually severe — and continuing — outbreak of rhinovirus, better known as a key cause of the common cold.

Experts say it is logistically and financially impossible to test everyone with flulike symptoms. And signs, treatment, and prognoses for a bad cold and a mild flu are virtually identical, so the response hardly differs.

But the finding may send an important message to parents who (despite doctors’ recommendations) are questioning the need to immunize their children against H1N1 because they seemed to have already had the disease, said Susan Coffin, director of infection prevention and control at Children’s Hospital.

“Maybe their child is still susceptible to H1N1 and should still get the vaccine,” Coffin said.

For years, rhinoviruses have been the Rodney Dangerfields of microbes. Even major institutions have found plenty of reasons not to pay them much mind. They are exceedingly common, they cause mere colds, they come in hundreds of hard-to-identify strains that make testing a challenge, and there is no effective treatment anyway.

Neither the federal government nor most states track rhinoviruses in the way they do “surveillance” for influenza, based on samplings of doctor diagnoses, emergency-room visits, and lab reports. Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia is one of the few institutions in the country that routinely checks for them whenever it tests for influenza and other viruses.