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Schools educating, informing, disinfecting in face of flu threat

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Todd Wilhelmi uses bleach and water to disinfect surfaces at Minooka Junior High School. The process is repeated every day in an effort to help keep students healthy despite the prevalence of seasonal and H1N1 flu this year. (Herald Photo by Heidi Terry-Litchfield)
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Local school districts are reacting in different fashions to the H1N1 threat.

Minooka Grade School District 201, the only local district with a laboratory-confirmed case of H1N1. has stepped up its cleaning schedule, with custodians working overtime in an effort to keep the virus at bay.

Parents of the student confirmed to have H1N1 themselves paid for the extra test to be done, while other area children reporting to the doctor are simply being swabbed for Influenza A, of which H1N1 is a sub-group.

To confirm H1N1, a swab would need to be sent for further testing, which typically isn’t being done due to cost and the fact the current influenza virus predominant in the area is the H1N1 sub- group.

With the treatments for both seasonal flu and H1N1 flu being the same, parents are able to treat their children without knowing the difference and schools are able to take precautions for both at the same time.

Jerry Blair, head of maintenance for District 201 said the cleaning of the school is no different than it is throughout the year, it’s just more of it, more often.

“We started about three or four years ago bleaching surfaces as a response to the flu that was being spread at the time,” Blair said. “We normally rotate what gets bleached every couple of weeks, but now we are doing it every day.”

He said they are using an aerosol spray on whatever can’t be wiped with the bleach water they are using on desks, tables, door knobs, light switches, and any other solid surface.

“Keyboards that can’t be wiped off we are spraying with a disinfectant,” he said. “Rooms that have a high absent rate, we are disinfecting with a fogger.”

The air filters have also been changed more often and the filtration devices run extra time in an effort to keep the children healthy.

On an average day, before absence rates reached 10 percent in the district, Blair said the custodial staff would sweep the floor and dump the garbage daily and spot mop in each classroom. Today, the staff is wiping every desk with bleach water, and cleaning ledges, chairs and any solid surface.

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