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Home Health Guide

TREATMENT OF COMMON COMPLAINTS / NO. 4: DIPHTHERIA (Prepared and issued by the Health Department.) If your child has a sore throat, pearl grey in colour, a high temperature and a headache, call the doctor immediately. The chances are that it has diphtheria, and this is a disease with which the slightest risk must not be taken. It can cause death within three or four days. The younger the child, the more dangerous the infection. Of course it may not be diptheria—it may be a touch of acute sore throat—but always suspect the worst until it is proved otherwise. The diphtheria germ specialises in young children, particularly in the years between one and live. Up to 35 years, the danger is alwaj's present, but over that age the natural resistance is usually sufficiently strong to overcome infection.

In New Zealand in recent years there has been a gradual decline in the incidence of this disease, but it is still distressingly high. The last availablo return shows that, in the school years from five to 15, one child in every 3d who caught the disease died. In the one-to-five years group, one in every 11 died.

The Health Department is hoping that as a result of its diphtheria immunisation campaign, this disease will be completely eradicated. It is inviting parents to have children under seven years of age protected by injection of anti-toxin, and, together with the Plunket Society, it is offering this protection at pre-school clinics. There is no charge for these services.

After six months of age a baby may be protected. Parents p,re advised to have their children protected in their first year, and before their second birthday. At this stage the injections are happily taken, and cause no upset.

Tests taken on, thousands of New Zealand children show that 92 per cent. |of the children between the ages of one and five years, are unprotected, and 70 per cent, of those between five and 15 years are similarly vulnerable. If artificial protection can be given in these dangerous years, surely it is worth while. It can be done with the parents’ co-operation.

In Toronto, Canada, last year there was not a single case of diphtheria among its 800,000 citizens. Every newborn child is immunised at the age of six months, and 80 per cent, of the city’s school children have received injections.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MT19410809.2.40.2

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Times, Volume 66, Issue 188, 9 August 1941, Page 5

Word Count
397

Home Health Guide Manawatu Times, Volume 66, Issue 188, 9 August 1941, Page 5

Home Health Guide Manawatu Times, Volume 66, Issue 188, 9 August 1941, Page 5

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