Children in hospital fighting for their lives!

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HappyLawyer

DIS Veteran/ OLCC Owner who's Mouse'n Down The Hou
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Ok so on the news last night we see that cildren in orlando 9 of them in the hospital for kidney failure resulting from their visits to petting zoo's, the areas around the zoo were swabbed and lots of bacteria and ecoli -not sure on spelling were found, this has me concerned-anyone else
 
It wasn't disney was it?

they have the locate zoo.

although it sounds like something done intentionally.
 
Wow, that's pretty scary... Ecoli can be particularly harmful in children, the elderly and people whose immune systems are not optimal. Remember the fast food hamburger cases of Ecoli years ago?? Several people died.

I know at our local fair they had hand sanitizing dispensers and now I see why. That's not enough, though, since if people touch their mouths before they use the hand lotion they have introduced the bacteria into their mouths already.

What I'm wondering, though, is why this petting zoo and not the hundreds of others? IMO there must be more to the story. Was it the food served at the PZ? Did someone mishandle animal feces (where EColi comes from - human too, not just animals)? Did someone deliberately contaminate certain areas? Will be interested to follow this story and praying for all those who became sick.
 
ok, i am not sure if it is one or more petting zoo's because the only thing that hit my ears was orlando, but they/ it is happening in orlando, i mean this story was so scarey one father donated part of his to save his daughters life but now there are 9 more kids in te same situation. all i can remember is the picture they showed of the childs body when she was first in failure, her body was lifeless her eyelids were maroon red, i know to stay away from those, the news said none of the kids were bit they touched and fed the animals.I hope parents had hand sanitizer or washed the childrens hands after
 

The article I read indicated the Central Florida Fair was a common link in several children that are positive for E. coli and that several of the children had a strain of Staph aureus instead of E. coli. At any rate, parents need to be very careful and make sure that children wash well after touching animals. Make sure that babies don't touch their mouths or their pacifiers until their hands have been thoroughly sanitized. Thanks to the OP for bringing this to our attention. We are going in May to WDW and one of the things we plan on is taking our little one to the petting zoo at FW. We will be keeping a very close eye on her little hands while we are there!
 
i hoped it would be helpful is someone planned on going during their vacation.
 
Something like this happened a several years ago in the suburbs of Philly where I live. The young kids were on a class trip to a local farm and I believe one child became very ill with Ecoli : http://consumeraffairs.com/news02/zoos.html
Hand sanitizers have since been placed everywhere. My daughter volunteered at our local township fair in Sept and there was a petting zoo. They wouldn't let you leave the enclosure without washing your hands. It is scary how something so innocent can turn into something do deadly. I hope those poor children in Orlando pull through.
 
I have to say how horrible it is to hear about those poor kids and their families. 3 years ago my son had E-coli and it was the scariest thing I have ever been through with my child. He was very very sick, and he did recover fully without any complications. The thing about this case in Florida is that it is possible they have E-coli and HUS. I hope that there are not any more kids affected by this outbreak. In our case we do not know where my son contracted the virus. To everyone out there ...the most important thing you can do , is teach your children that hand washing is so important to keep themselves and others healthy, especially after using the bathroom and before eating! Make sure all meats are cooked properly and those so-called pre-washed bagged salads should be washed before eaten. The bagged salad was the most likely culprit in my sons case according to the CDC. Those salads are indeed washed but they are bagged and washed in places such as Mexicao and South America where the water can be infected. Please take caution. Lets pray for those poor kids to recover.
 
Wow--so sorry to hear about those children. Thank you for the reminder...we're heading to WDW next week and my kids love brushing the animals at Rafiki's Planet Watch in AK. We'll be extra careful! Also, thanks for the tip about washing the bagged salad before use. I didn't think it needed to be done, but I'll probably take the precaution in the future! :)
 
I doubt the E.coli was intentionally placed. More likely the kids picked it up while petting the animals, then didn't wash their hands. My niece picked it up exactly that way, and ended up with HUS. Thankfully, she lived, but it has changed her life. Her kidneys no longer function the way they should and she has to watch her diet carefully.
 
I thought this might be an interesting article to post in light of the subject matter. There are many other ways to get an EColi besides petting zoos including ingesting water in swimming pools and eating undercooked hamburger. Good to know! :faint:

http://www.mydna.com/health/diseases/ecoli

ETA: After doing a search I realized that petting zoo transmission has become more common in the past couple of years. Here's another interesting article:

E. coli Outbreak Linked to Petting Zoo
Always wash after handling animals, experts urge

By Adam Marcus
HealthScout Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Nov. 8 (HealthScout) -- Federal and local health officials are investigating an outbreak of potentially deadly Escherichia coli O157:H7 bacteria linked to a Pennsylvania petting zoo that sickened at least 25 young children.

The infection has been confirmed in at least 14 children. It is suspected in another 11 who suffered diarrhea after visiting the Merrymead Farm petting zoo, a popular attraction in southeast Pennsylvania. Roughly 10 of the children were hospitalized, and at least six had hemolytic uremic syndrome, a condition that sometimes follows E. coli poisoning and can lead to lasting kidney damage.

Three children are still in the hospital, one in serious but stable condition, health officials say. The other two are expected to make a full recovery.

In what may be a related incident, the newborn baby of the farm's owners died four days after birth from a mix of infections that included E. coli, officials say. However, investigators have not been able to link the particular strain of bacteria to the outbreak.

State health officials learned of the first case of E. coli poisoning at the petting zoo in September, but the zoo was not shut down to visitors until last weekend. An official at the Montgomery County health department, which is handling the investigation, says quicker action might have prevented some cases.

Tom Skinner, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, says his agency was contacted last week about the outbreak, and has sent investigators to Pennsylvania to take samples from both the animals on the farm and the affected children. "We don't know how the people got it. We're looking at food and water on the property," says Skinner.

Since the outbreak, the Merrymead Farm has posted signs stressing the importance of washing hands after touching animals. The zoo is an extremely popular tourist destination, taking in some 2,000 visitors on the weekends, and hundreds during the week.

E. coli 0157:H7 sickens some 73,000 Americans each year, killing roughly 60, according to the CDC. The infection is typically passed through undercooked meat contaminated with cattle feces, the usual route of transmission. Other animals have been known to carry the harmful microbe. Unpasteurized foods, like milk or ciders, are also reservoirs for the bacteria.

The latest outbreak of E. coli O157:H7 isn't the first to involve a petting zoo. Similar episodes have been reported in England, Canada and the United States, including one last spring in Washington's Snohomish County that sickened five children, three of whom were hospitalized.

Dr. Jan Hofmann, who investigated the Washington outbreak, says the farm where it occurred did not have sinks either near where children handled the animals nor where they ate their lunch.

"Animals obviously don't have great hygiene. Their environment tends to be contaminated with feces. And kids have pretty poor hygiene," says Hofmann, the deputy health officer for the Snohomish health district. The lesson, she says, is that, "Whenever there's contact between kids and animals, adults need to be certain that they [children] wash their hands thoroughly."

In the wake of the outbreak, the petting zoo installed temporary wash basins, which have since been converted to permanent stations, Hofmann says. Meanwhile, the state of Washington now has a task force in place to forge guidelines for petting zoos.

What To Do

Jane Ballentine, a spokeswoman for the American Zoo and Aquarium Association, says her group has safety recommendations for its members that include ways, largely logistical, of keeping animals and people mutually safe from each other. But the association doesn't offer guidance on having sinks at petting zoos.

Even so, says Ballentine, "We always are telling people: If you've touched an animal, hit the bathroom."

To learn more about E. coli, try the CDC.

Or, take a look at these previous HealthScout stories on animals.
08-NOV-2000

Copyright © 2000 Rx Remedy, Inc.
Copyright© 2000 i-MedREVIEW inc.


And one more from the Centers for Disease Control:

http://www.cdc.gov/healthypets/diseases/ecoli.htm



Thanks to the OP for posting this interesting subject matter. EColi infection is a health issue for all of us.
 
We live in the UK and we had a poor local child that was severly brain damaged from E:coli from a local farm (just outside London) about five years ago.

I was talking to my DD this morning about visiting the petting farm at Animal Kingdom when we go in May and that if she really must touch the animals she MUST MAKE SURE TO WASH HER HANDS. I cannot emphasise enough that after touching the animals both children and parents must wash their hands.

I had no idea that this disease was actually in the US so this is a complete coincidence.


Susan
 
Disney does a good job of routing you by the handwashing on both the way in and out at AK. (Plus it is one of the cleaner "petting zoos" I have ever seen LOL!)

There was a thing on the local news here and the vet said that this tends to occur when kids do NOT wash thier hands after petting. Sounded like maybe there was no hand washing station at this "petting zoo"
 
that i posted this on another thread there is always someone who wants to debate someting or tell other people what to do it amazes me, i though people going to florida might need this info so they can take more precautions if going to one of these places.
i hope someone got help form this i am glad this thread on this board is being kept positive, the words of the ohter person was "lighten up" no one is over reacting, but you can never be too careful when it comes to safety especially that of kids-just my thoughts
 
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