US health authorities brace for confusion over flu and Ebola
After weeks of Ebola panic, false alarms and quibbles over quarantine in the US, health authorities are bracing for a new battle of the flu season.
After weeks of Ebola panic, false alarms and quibbles over quarantine in the US, health authorities are bracing for a new battle of the flu season.
But this year is different for two reasons. First is the Ebola epidemic in West Africa that spilled into the United States.
The second is the late summer outbreak of enterovirus D68, a respiratory illness that has affected more than 1,100 people in 46 states since August, the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said.
Most areas of the country are reporting a decline in EV-D68, but seven states, including California, are still seeing increases.
There is no vaccine against EV-D68, which has been linked to paralysis and neurological symptoms in a small number of young patients. Nor is there any treatment on the market to cure or prevent Ebola, although experimental vaccines are being fast-tracked.