First time poster long time reader,
It sounds like they're doing the right thing at the health center. If I were a parent, I'd rather the doctors be up to date and doing what the CDC recommends and justifying what they do medically rather than what some Jack-in-the-box doctor does out of media-generated fear, not to mention being "for profit", making plenty of money off those flu tests and lab tests..
I did a little research:
1. CDC Guidelines suggest only treating those at high-risk (under 5, over 65, kids on aspirin, pregnant women, chronically ill/immunosuppressed)
http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/institutions/guidance/ and suggests people staying at home (which means not going to the clinic where they can infect those chronically ill people).
2. The flu test is horribly inaccurate - see under rapid testing section (10-70% - might as well flip a coin) -
http://cdc.gov/h1n1flu/guidance/rapid_testing.htm
3. Tamiflu isn't a silver bullet. Only decreases symptoms by 1.3 days -from their own website -
http://www.tamiflu.com/hcp/influenza-treatment.aspx. Also Tamiflu costs $100 and can have side effects (15% vomiting and other side effects per their website), not to mention potential resistance as with the flu earlier this year.
4. And of course, with college kids, who do have a tendency for bad behavior, read this warning from the Tamiflu website: "Influenza can be associated with a variety of neurologic and behavioral symptoms, which can include events such as hallucinations, delirium and abnormal behavior, in some cases resulting in fatal outcomes. These events may occur in the setting of encephalitis or encephalopathy but can occur without obvious severe disease. There have been postmarketing reports (mostly from Japan) of delirium and abnormal behavior leading to injury, and in
some cases resulting in fatal outcomes, in patients with influenza who were receiving TAMIFLU. Because these events were reported voluntarily during clinical practice, estimates of frequency cannot be made but they appear to be uncommon based on TAMIFLU usage data. These events were reported primarily among pediatric patients and often had an abrupt onset and rapid resolution. The contribution of TAMIFLU to these events has not been established. Patients with influenza should be closely monitored for signs of abnormal behavior. If neuropsychiatric symptoms occur, the risks and benefits of continuing treatment should be evaluated for each patient."
So, I think I could better justify the MSU doctors based on the above, rather than shotgun testing/treating people because they have money or want it.
<span lang="EN">It is better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt.
Mark Twain ( <font color="#0000FF" size="1"><font color="#0000FF" size="1">http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Mark_Twain/</font></font> <font size="1">)</font></span></p>
<span lang="EN">
US humorist, novelist, short story author, & wit (1835 - 1910)</span></p>