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Meningitis Threat for College Freshmen

ByJenette Restivo
August 08, 2001, 1:36 PM

Aug. 8 -- Here's one more reason besides home cooking and clean laundry for college students to consider staying home during their freshman year.

A study published in today's The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that college freshmen living in dormitories were more than seven times as likely to acquire the infection leading to meningitis than college students in general and three and a half times as likely as the population of 18- to 23-year-old nonstudents.

The study, conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, also suggests that the use of the currently available vaccine for the infection could substantially reduce risk of the disease in these students.

Close, Not Casual, Contact

Meningitis is an infection of the fluid of a person's spinal cord and the fluid that surrounds the brain, caused by bacteria called meningococcal.

Meningococcal infection is a major cause of bacterial meningitis, the more severe from of meningitis that can result in permanent brain damage, hearing loss, learning disability or loss of a limb.

The meningococcal bacteria are spread from person to person through close contact, not by casual contact or by touching contaminated objects. Common symptoms of meningitis include high fever, headache, and stiff neck and can develop anytime from several hours to 1 to 2 days after infection.

Freshmen at Particular Risk

The infection is said to have risen in incidence over the past 10 years among adolescents and young adults as outbreaks of meningococcal disease, rare in the 1980s, have become more frequent since 1991. Though the CDC altered its recommendations last year to support vaccination of college-aged students for the disease, the risk of the disease is still considered relatively small for this age group, at 1.4 individuals per 100,000 and a total of 2,400 yearly cases for the entire U.S. population.

The CDC study, conducted over a one-year period from September of 1998 to August of 1999, surveyed the health departments in the 50 states along with 231 college health centers.

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